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prefa cW
Only through many long laborious nnonths
of effort on the parts of the entire
INTERLACHEN staff is this, your 195!
edition of the Florida Southern year-
book, off the presses.
If it were not for the complete coopera-
tion of the staff , the administration, and
all of those lesser individuals, the Frank
Lloyd Wright issue would not have been
possible.
, . , . , ,» • # <
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^fsm4!i^:^iitl^!^i^-
INTERLACHEN
The Yearbook
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
LAKELAND, FLORIDA
t o m o r r o w
L L L t L
MORTON B. TATAR
Editor-in-Chief
LEE BUFFO
HARRY ELLIOTT
Assistant Editors
ROBERT E. TAYLOR
Business Manager
To The Students of Florida Southern:
When Dr. Spivey — the good genius of Florida Southern College — flew
up to Taliesin about thirteen years ago this spring — he came with the avowed
purpose of giving the United States at least one example of a college wherein
modern life was to have the advantages of modern science and art in actual
building construction. He told me he wanted me as much for my philosophy
as for my architecture. I assured him they were inseparable.
As ever since, these, your college buildings, have been in continuous state
of growth. Their outdoor garden character is an expression of Florida at
its best. Study these buildings, because unless you do know something about
the kind of building we call Organic Architecture you can't really know
very much about anything else worth knowing. Knowing what is good or
bad about a building is knowing about the life you live and how you live
it if not why. So try to understand why buildings are the way they are.
There is always some reason in and behind every front you see or else
there is none. If there is none, then what you see is bad. To see all there is
to see takes much study and much cultivation.
Yes. But if you ask why whenever you see what you like or like what
you see, you will start along the path of comprehension. That will be good
because there can be no great life for any people without integral culture.
Knowledge of the ivhy in Architecture is the true basis of a culture just
now as it has ever been.
All we best know about the great civilizations that have died is what we
learn from their Architecture. If our civilization were destroyed now what
would civilizations to come think of us as a people were they to someday
look back upon what we have done and are so busy doing. What would they
see, do you think.
So throughout these buildings in which you study and work now, try to
understand what it is all about — what it in particular means to you. What
it means today and tomorrow is important because buildings last a long time.
So here you will see something of your own today that is tomorroiv. And
maybe the day after that.
Here at least at Florida Southern is an education saga along the lines of
an indigenous American Architecture and that means a culture of our own.
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT
Taliesin West
I
frank lloyd wright
. i it t t I i
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE TO THE INTERLACHEN:
This is my twenty-sixth year to write a little message for oirr
INTERLACHEN. From year to year, I find myself thinking more and more
about the men and women who have graduated from the college during my ~
long stay. No matter where I go, I always meet some former students,
who manifest a great appreciation for what the college did for them.
All of this brings me great reward and deep satisfaction.
After the seniors of this class go out to take up their tasks, they
will join thousands of others who have preceeded them. Each one of them
will go with my blessings and prayers .
To the students who are to return next year, I want to wish a good
summer and a pleasant experience in whatever you plan to do. All our
lives are in a fluid state and none of us know what is ahead of us from
day to day. .However, I am convinced that out of all of this will come a
better day for the college and a better day for all mankind.
Very sincerely yours.
Ludd M. Spivey
President
dr. ludd m. spivey
president
A.B., M.A., B.D., LL. D., Ed.D.
'■. 'i K ■■^''.'■■Vi
dr. daniel /• mccarthy
chancellor
florida southern college
1950-51
"v.^ *
Dr. McCarthy at work.
Dr. and Mrs. McCarthy pose before three water colors loaned to
the college from their private collection.
the administration
DR. CHARLES THRIFT
Vice President
J. A. BATTLE
Dean of Students
ERNEST A. LILLEY
Director of Public
Relations
W. E. DeMELT
Registrar
MARGARET ROGERS
Dean of Women
DR. J. C. PEEL
Dean
ALTOiN KINDRED
Bursar
CORNING TOLLE
Business Manager
4 4 * * I » *
The persons working in the Administrative offices are first row: Mrs. Mary Williams,
Mrs. Helen Hussey, Mrs. Marion Woods, Miss Arline Laage, Mrs. Edith Waters, Mrs.
Virginia Point.
Second row: Miss Ouida Fields, Mrs. Ray Curtis, Miss Virginia Brown, Miss Virginia
Falama, Dean Wm. E. DeMelt, Mr. Alton Kindred, Miss Nikki Ironmonger, Miss
Cecele Powell.
EVA MILLER
Assistant Dean of Women
OWEEN SUMNER
Librarian
10
\
^
sA^^^^.n^'mSS'
Chairrnan
Arts
faculty
Science
GEORGE n u^
' '-"■Vision ly
t 4 > >-#-#-#-*->-j^
JUAMTA ANDERSON
Social Studies
0. S. BANDY
Language
Jm mk
" .^ir^'A
HENRY G. HARNETT
English
HELEN BARNUM
Music
CHARLES M. BEHRMAN
Business
M. H. BERRY
Science
JOHN D. BYRD
English
E. A. CASE
Mathematics
ROBERT A. CHAPMAN
Social Studies
LAURA CLYATT
Business Administration
S. G. COE
Social Studies
SARAH COLEMAN
Kindergarten and Nursery
it 4 t * * t
ROY COUCH
Crew Coach
GRACE L. DE CASTERLINE
Religion
THOMAS DELLA CIOPPA
Language
MILDRED DRACH
Social Studies
WALTER EDDY
Research
ROLAND ELDERKIN
Social Studies
14
C. F. FERNER
Journalism
W. G. FLETCHER
Religion
T. J. FORD
Social Studies
CARRIE W. FOSTER
Home Economics
A. F. FUGITT
Social Studies
W. H. FUGITT
English
15
i 4 • t * • '
ROBERT GAYLER
Music
CHARLES GILES
Art
YVONNE GOLDSBOROUGH
Language
GEORGE GREBENSTICHIKOFF
Language
ADA HAMELRYCK
Language
EMILY HANCOCK
Business Administration
16
CHARLES W. HAWKINS
Language
ROLAND F. HUSSEY
Science
MILDRED IBBERSON
Speech
AGNES JOHNSON
English
EDWARD JOHNSON
Social Studies
LEROY JOHNSON
Mathematics
17
. ■••. .r--, ■':» .^^f^A -. 'i rt
ROY S. KISER
Science
E. C. KNIPPERS
Business Administration
SAMUEL LASTINGER
Elementary Education
ROBERT JAMES LAWTON
Music
JIM LEASE
Physical Education
SAMUEL LUCE
Director of Athletics
ELAINE MINNIS
Business Administration
ANTHONY Q. MUSTOE
Mathematics
J. GORDON OGDEN. JR.
Secondary Education
COLIN O'MORE
Music
AVON PEACOCK
Citrus
WALLACE PEFLEY
Music
19
GAIL POTTER
Dramatics
LESLIE PURCELL
English
kfe^i^..\w
CLARENCE S. RAINWATER
Science
DAVID L. READDICK
Industrial Arts
JAMES B. REDD
Citrus
WALTER F. REIFSNYDER. JR.
Sculpture
20
B. P. REINSCH
Mathematics
ROBERT G. RICHARDS
Social Sfudies
ELIZABETH ROLLER
Physical Education
WALTER O. ROPP
Business Administration
HELEN A. SCUTT
English
FRED J. SEAVER
Science
21
♦ ■•#•#. ♦,-»■• J*
LOTTIE SELIG
Home Economics
MAX J. SELIG
Business Administration
EARL SMITH
Science
WILLIAM SPIVEY
Music
JOHN G. SNYDER
Religion
BORIS T. SOKOLOFF
Director of Citrus Research
22
WILLIAM STEWART
Journalism
DONNA STODDARD
Art
RUTH F. TERRY
Mathematics
CHARLES VANNOY
Language
D. C. VINCENT
Psychology
MAURICE WADE
Music
23
THOMAS J. WAGNER
Psychology
ROGERS V. WHITENER
English
CLARENCE A. WOOD
Psychology
G. FLOYD ZIMMERMAN, JR.
Industrial Arts
Student body officers
24
NED HILL
President
BUD STONE
Vice President
BETTY ANN OWSLEY
Secretary-Treasurer
Monty Wooleys with Southern accents
'#•♦>•♦•♦/»'*;/
February graiL ...^i. „ „;cr
26
Maestro Joe and the singing athletes.
:>..#-♦>•>•♦■>.
honor walk
student
grant 1. miller, III
28
This year's "honor walk" student has a life story that would do justice to any novel.
He is Grant L. Miller, III, who has maintained a phenomenal 2.94 average for
his whole college program, this after being told that he was not college material.
Grant quit high school at the age of 15 and joined the Navy and was later dis-
charged because of his age. He attended an engine school for two years and then
enlisted in the Air Force. While serving in Germany, he met the girl whom he was
later to marry.
Upon his final discharge, he returned to his native Lakeland and commenced at
Southern. The rest is scholastic history.
west campus . . .
frank Uoyd
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Entrance to library.
30
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east campus
robert law weed
Overlooking college terrace
•^.•> •'- ./ J.- -4
32
One of the dormitories built for the
male students on the East Campus.
33
Edge Hall as seen from
the Garden of Medita-
tion.
Alan Spivey Hall — Girls Dormitory.
middle
campus
The Art Building.
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34
Home of Dr. and Mrs.
Ludd M. Spivey, presi-
dent of Florida South-
ern College.
35
>:■#•=♦'#:•'♦■• >:^'f#Li
Air view of the 19 unit sec-
tion of the East Campus
designed by Robert Law
Weed of Miami.
luded in this group are
eight men's dorms, four
sorority houses, the Com-
mons, five units being de-
voted to family housing.
To the left, in the back-
ground are: the Art build-
ing, Pipkin bandshell. Gil-
bert gymnasium, and the
temporary Science build-
ings.
In the foreground is the Tau
Kappa Epsilon fraternity
house.
The Vagabond's work shop.
Jackson religion building
36
Temporary Science Building
Music Building
the future ... by
frank Uoyd wright
POLK COUNTY SCIENCE BUILDING
FLORIDA. SOUTHERN COLLEGE, LAKELAND, FLORIDA
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT, ARCHITECT
■a^-.Jwsijji:,:^'
W4
Above is a complete view of
the Art Building.
In upper left hand corner
is the Intern building to
be used by elementary
and secondary education
majors.
The Art Building as seen from Johnson Street.
Enlarged view of center of building.
37
''l-4(r^^^n»U(4
^©'i/o
fs
senior officers
Seated: Doris Brown and Lorraine Mingonet. Standing: Basil "Rocky" Pegg, Jerry
Klieger and Russ Pritchard.
42
Joseph Frederick Abel
B.S. Science
Rochester, N. Y.
Sigma Phi Epsilon; Quarter Century Club,
Sergeant-at-Arms; Newman Club, Social Chair-
man; Transfer from Sampson College.
EdUARDO J. ACEVEDO
B.S. Biology
Bayamon, Puerto Rico
International Club; Phi Sigma Kappa; Varsity
Softball Team; Varsity Volleyball Team.
William Clothier Alcorn
B.S. Business Administration
Wyncote, Pa.
Lambda Chi Alpha, Ritualist 50, 5L
Delbert E. Allen
B.S. Social Science
Hollywood, Fla.
Who's Who; Pi Kappa Phi, President 50, 51,
Chaplain 49; Interfraternity Council, Presi-
dent 50, 51; Varsity "S" Club; Varsity Crew
50, 51.
Albert Richard Arrigale
B.S. Business Administration
New York City, N. Y.
Transfer from Sampson College.
John Allen Attaway
B.S. Chemistry
Haines City, Fla.
Pi Kappa Phi; Intramural Sports; Scholar-
ship Chairman.
Mary King Auman
B.S. Business Administration
Lakeland, Fla.
Transfer from High Point College and Flora
MacDonald College.
Edwin Newton Averett
B.S. Business Administration
Bascom, Fla.
43
Ted Dulaney Barker
A.B. Religion
Bristol, Tenn.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Chaplain; Chorus, Busi-
ness Manager; Inter-Faith Council; Micro-
phone Club; Baptist Student Union, Adver-
tising Manager.
Johnny Wesley Barrett
B.S. Music Education
New Port Richey, Fla.
Thomas Bataleas
B.S. Economics
New York City, N. Y.
Who's Who; Sigma Phi Epsilon, Secretary;
Pi Gamma Mu; Transfer from Texas Uni-
versity.
Arthur N. Baumann
B.S. Chemistry
Bogota, N. J.
Science Club.
Vernon Howard Beam
A.B. Social Studies
Punxsutawney, Pa.
Transfer from Juniata College.
Clarence John Bellovich
B.S. Business Administration
Whiting. Indiana
Newman Club, President.
Bruce Rainboth Berner
B.S. Accounting
Rochester, N. Y.
Track Team 50.
Bernice 0. Bethea
B.S. Kindergarten and Nursery Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Beta Sigma Omicron, Treasurer; Future
Teachers of America.
44
Robert Alan Billstrand
B.S. Business Administration
Chicago, 111.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Treasurer, Chaplain;
Inter-Faith Council; Future Teachers of
America; "S" Club: Basketball Team; Track
Team.
Robert MacArthur Bishop
B.S. Business Administration
Leonia, N. J.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Vagabonds; Transfer
from University of Virginia.
\AU
Robert Gorden Black
B.S. Journalism
New York City, N. Y.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Parliamentarian; Flori-
da Intercollegiate Press Association, Presi-
dent; Senate; The Southern. Editor .50;
Microphone Club; Press Club; Campus Crier.
Lee Whitfield Blount
B.S. Business Administration and English
Tampa. Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Eminent Chronicler;
Intramural .Sports; Transfer from George-
town University.
Robert Stewart Ely
B.S. Chemistry and Mathematics
Lakeland. Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha, Secretary; Senate; Portico
Club; Science Club; Chorus.
Earl Douglas Boatwright
B.S. Business Administration
Winter Haven, Fla.
Theta Chi; Intramural Board.
Frederick Stephen Boerum
Social Studies
Brooklyn. N. Y.
"S" Club; Varsity Golf; Varsity Baseball;
Intramural Football.
Harold Owen Booth, Jr.
S. Economics
Tarrytown. N. Y.
Theta Chi; Intramural Board, Treasurer.
45
Jean Truly Boyd
S. Social Science
Fayette, Miss.
Thurston Leondus Brooks, Jr.
B.S. Business Administration'
Palm Beach, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Sidney Lee Broughton
B.S. Business Administration
Clewiston, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha; Future Teachers of Amer-
ica; Variety Players.
Burleigh Kenneth Brown
B.S. Business Administration
Seffner, Fla.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Baptist Student Union;
Library Assistant.
Doris M. Brown
B.S. Music Education
Sheridan, Wyoming
Cap and Gown; Delta Zeta, President; Secre-
tary Treasurer of Senior Class; Chorus; Pan
Hellenic Council; Future Teachers of Amer-
ica; Transfer from Salem College.
Marilyn Brown
B.S. Kindergarten Education
Lake Butler, Fla.
Delta Zeta, Vice President; Home Economics
Club; Chorus; Baptist Student Union; Fu-
ture Teachers of America.
Barbara Mae Bryan
Bradley Beach, N. J.
Robert Rhinehart Buchanan
B.S. Business Administration
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Theta Chi, Vice President 50, Social Chair-
man 49; Intramural Board; Intramural
Sports; Cheerleader 49; Industrial Arts Club.
46
Edwin Frank Buck
B.S. Industrial Arts
Chicago, 111.
Industrial Arts Club, Social Chairman
Claire Burch
A.B. Home Economics
Winter Garden, Fla.
Vagabonds; Independent Women.
Thomas Gerald Butler
A.B. English
Lakeland. Fla.
Tau Kappa Alpha.
R. Wayne Buzbee
B.S. Accounting
Florence Villa, Fla.
Transfer from Stetson University.
Juan Jazer Byrd
B.S. Accounting
Winston Salem, N. C.
Debate Council.
Chester Melvyn Caldwell
B.S. Business Administration
Dundee, Fla.
Future Teachers of America.
Roger Glenn Campbell
A.B. Psychology
Lakeland, Fla.
Portico Club; Kappa Pi, President; Pi Gam-
ma Mu; Interlachen, Cover Artist 50 and 51.
William Peter Campbell
A.B. History
Bound Brook, N. J.
Pi Gamma Mu; International Club.
47
I^w^ l^^w^
Ralph G. Caprio
A.B. Psychology
Newark, N. J.
Sigma Phi Epsilon, Vice President; Intra-
mural Board; Intramural Sports, Manager;
Mu Delta, Historian.
Nancy Caperton
B.S. Home Economics
Babson Park, Fla.
Delta Zeta; Home Economics Club; Transfer
from Western College.
Robert James Cassady
B.S. Accounting
Vero Beach, Fla.
John Richard Cassidy
B.S. English
RockviUe Centre, N. Y.
Tau Kappa Epsilon, Senator;
Sports.
Intramural
Shirley Chapman
B.S. Sociology
Lakeland. Fla.
Transfer from University of Florida.
Arlene Hope Charles
B.S. Biology
Glenn Allen, Va.
Beta Sigma Omicron; Sweetheart of Sigma
Phi Epsilon 50-51; House President of Allen
Spivey Hall; Women's Student Government
Association Council; Science Club.
Betty Lou Cheyne
B.S. Elementary Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Alpha Omicron Pi; Future Teachers
America.
Edward W. Choquette, Jr.
B..S. Business
Jacksonville Beach, Fla.
Crew; "S" Club; Independent Football;
dependent Crew; Transfer from Stetson Un
versity.
48
Frank Ciccone
A.B. Social Science
Bound Brook. N. J.
Tau Kappa Epsilon; Senator
Staff; Intramural Sports.
Mason E. Clarson
.\.B. History
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Phi Delta Theta: Science Club: Baseball;
Microphone Club; Transfer from Tulane Uni-
versity.
Elwell J. Clendenny
B.S. Economics
Rahway. N. J.
Pi Gamma Mu.
Mary M. Clendenny
B.S. Home Economics
Rahway. N. J.
Home Economics Club; Future Teachers of
America; Kappa Omicron Pi.
f,
Pruitt B. Cobb
S. Speech
Dallas. Texas
Tau Kappa Epsilon; Vagabonds; Debate Club.
George Clayton Cone
B.S. Biology
Lakeland. Fla.
Theta Chi; Baptist Student Union; Science
Club.
Vernon Curtis Conner
B.S. Citrus
Tampa, Fla.
Debate Council. .Secretary and Treasurer 49-
50.
William Alfred Couch
i.S. Physical Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Kappa Phi; Future Teachers of America;
Crew49-50-51; -'S" Club.
-. -■. <v. ^i % .'k '/■*-
Edmund Willis Grafton
B.S. Industrial Arts
Orange, Va.
Industrial Arts Club.
LuLA Crenshaw
B.S. Social Studies
Orlando. Fla.
Future Teachers of America; Women's Stu-
dent Government Association: Library Assis-
Harry Emmett Crittenden
A.B. Religion
John Coolidge Davidson
B.S. Business
Radburn, N. J.
Pi Kappa Phi; Intramural Sports.
Virginia Starnes Davidson
B.S. Music
Winter Haven, Fla.
Cap and Gown ; Chorus.
Helen F. Dennis
B.S. Music
Columbus, Ohio
Orchestra, Secretary 49-50; Independent Wo-
men, President 49; Future Teachers of
.America; Chorus; Library Assistant.
Gordon Lynn Dickerson
.S. Chemistry and Biology
Winter Garden. Fla.
Pi Kappa Phi; Quarter Century Club; Trans
fer from West Texas State College.
Robert Eugene Dickson
B..S. Fine Art
Lake Wales, Fla.
^'
m
Russell DuBois
B.S. Art Education
West Orange. N. J.
Theta Chi ; Future Teachers of America.
Betty Laine Dudney
B.S. Journalism
Tampa, Fla.
Southern, Circulation Manager 49, Reporter
48; Press Club.
Janet Elizabeth Dunn
B.S. Art
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Vagabonds, Art Director; Interlachen, Art
Editor; Transfer from St. Petersburg Junior
College; Kappa Pi.
George David Dykes
B.S. Business Administration
Wilmington, Del.
Lambda Chi Alpha, Secretary; Intramural
Sports; Quarter Century Club, Secretary;
Transfer from Sampson College.
Louise Wyckoff Eastwood
A.B. Sociology
Stratford, Conn.
Alpha Omicorn Pi.
Arthur Eisler
B.S. Social Studies
Bayonne, N. J.
Who's Who; Tau Epsilon Phi, Chancellor,
Vice Chancellor, Secretary, Historian; Inter-
Fraternity Council, Secretary 50-51; "S"
Club; Hillel, Treasurer.
Dorothy Beryl Eubanks
A.B. Religion
Jacksonville, Fla.
Who"s Who; Beta Sigma Omicron, Treasurer;
Sigma Rho Epsilon, Publicity; Methodist
Student Movement; Inter- Faith Council; Vag-
abonds.
Phoebe Lee Faulkner
B.S. Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Mu; Future Teachers of America; Trans-
fer from Stetson University.
51
# * i
Russell J. Fee, Jr.
A.B. Journalism
Tampa, Fla.
Portico Club; Pi Gamma Mu; ^ho's Who;
Sports Publicity 50-51.
William Albert Fiedler, Jr.
Business Administration
Kidgewood, N. J.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Southern Staff 47; Los
Picaros.
F. Kenneth Fields
A.B., B.S. Art and English
.Sanford, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Recorder, Vice Presi-
dent; Kappa Pi; Transfer from Stetson Uni-
versity.
Chester F. Fisher, Jr.
S. Business Administration
York, Penn.
Lambda Chi Alpha, Secretary; Intramural
rd.
August Fitzner
B.S. Business Administration
Los Angeles, California
Tau Kappa Epsilon, Chaplain 49-50.
Theodore Lynn Flickinger
B,S. Music
Ft. Myers, Fla.
Chorus; Transfer from Michigan State Col
lege.
Edward S. Fog.^rty
B.S. Business Administration
Bradenton, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha.
Gene Foutz
Business Administration
Hagerstown, Ind.
Theta Chi; "S" Club; Basketball
Dana Joseph Freeman
B.S. Social Science
Rye, N. H.
Lambda Chi Alpha, Treasurer 48-49; Stu-
dent Senate 48-49-50; Inter-Fratemity Coun-
cil; The Southern, Business Manager; Intra-
mural Crew.
Bruce Frost
A.B. History
Port Washington. N. Y.
Lambda Chi Alpha, Social Chairman
Gamma Mu, Vice President.
"^Kiv
«JP*
Mary Margaret Fulwood
A.B., B.S. • Elementary Education
and Music Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Sigma Rho Epsilon; Future Teachers of
America; Chorus; Choristers.
Robert Ernest Fuer
B.S. Business Administration
Bound Brook, N. J.
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Robert Gannett, Jr.
A.B. Journalism
Englewood, N. J.
Portico Club; Tau Kappa Epsilon, President
49-51 ; Inter-Fraternity Council, Treasurer 50-
51; Phi Beta Chi, Vice President 47-48;
Senate.
Bernard Gavrylczyk
B.S. Business Administration
Amsterdam, N. Y.
Sigma Phi Epsilon; Newman Club; Quarter
Century Club; Intramural Sports.
Martin Van Gay
B.S. Business Administration
Frostproof, Fla.
"S" Club; Varsity Crew; Intramural Basket-
ball; Beta Chi; Transfer from Tampa Uni-
versity.
Anthony Robert Giambalvo
B.A. History
Ozone Park, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Intramural Sports;
man Club ; Transfer from Seton Hall.
• ■•..• '^ 'a ;■*/]#
Julia Victoria Gibson
S. Home Economics
Bartow, Fla.
Delta Zeta; Future Teachers of America;
Home Economics Club; Transfer from Judson
College.
Malcolm Paul Gillet
B.S. Business Administration
Hillside, N. J.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Basketball, Manager; "S"
Club; Hilleh
John Clarke Gilmore
B.S. Accounting
Lakeland, Fla.
Alfred S. Goldstein
A.B. Social Studies
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Pi Gamma Mu; Hillel;
The Southern Staff; Varsity Track Team;
Transfer from Sampson College.
Arthur Thomas Governale
B.S. Social Studies
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Gamma Mu; Future Teachers of America;
Transfer from Sampson College.
Lewis B. Gracey
B.S. Biology-
Venn Yan, N. Y.
Theta Chi, Librarian, Chaplain; Inter-Faith
Council; Intramural Sports; Science Club;
Transfer from Hobart College.
James Earl Gray
B.S. Accounting
Lithia, Fla.
Igor Gregory Grzyb
A.B., B.S. German and Biology
New York City, N. Y.
Phi Sigma Kappa; 'International Club, Coun
cil Member; Science Club.
54
Trassy C. Hadjiyannakis
B.S. Science
Cairo, Egypt
International Club.
Marilyn Florence Hahn
.S. Home Economics
Des Plaines, 111.
Alpha Chi Omega; Home Economics Club
Treasurer.
William Henry Hahn
B.S. Industrial Arts
Des Plaines, 111.
Lambda Chi Alpha.
William E. Haines
B.S. Business Administration-
Chicago, 111.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Pledge Master; Trans-
fer from Northwestern University.
B.S. Journalism
Yonkers, N. Y.
Portico Club; Pi Kappa Phi, Historian; Cam-
era Club, President; Press Club; Student
Council; The Southern Staff, Photographer
and Editor.
Frances Yvonne Harmon
B.S. Elementary Education
Dunedin, Fla.
Secretary-Treasurer of Junior Class; Inde-
pendent Women's Social Chairman, Secretary,
President; Future Teachers of America; Cho-
rus; College Heights Choir, Vice President;
YWCA, Treasurer; Library Assistant.
Mary Jeannette Hatton
A.B. Kindergarten Education
Bartow, Fla.
Alpha Delta Pi, Assistant Social Chairman;
Future Teachers of America.
Kenneth Eugene Hawkins
A.B. History
Plant City, Fla.
i. .* . * e I • r • r •» r
m
Mary Lee Haws
B.S. Business Administration
Fulton, Ky.
Alpha Delta Pi, President, Social Chairman;
The Southern; Panhellenic Council.
TOSHITSUNE HaYAMA
B.S. Economics
Okinawa
International Club.
Frances Hays
B.S. Elementary Education
Winter Haven, Fla.
Future Teachers of .\merica. Secretary; Meth-
odist Student Movement; Variety Players;
Transfer from Centre College.
Kurt Hedrick
B.A. Economics
Lakeland, Fla.
Mary Elizabeth Hendry
B.S. Music
Wauchula, Fla.
Future Teachers of America.
Samuel Hetrick
B.S. Business Administration
Lakeland, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Pledge Master;
Intramural Sports.
Golf;
Ned Webster Hill, Jr.
B.S. Mathematics
Avon Park, Fla.
Student Government, President; Pi Kappa
Phi; Who's Who; Portico Club, President;
Kappa Deha Pi, Vice President; FTA
Science Club.
Homer Balfour Hirt
B.S. Business Administration
Chattahoochee. Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha, Treasurer, Vice President;
Inter- Fraternity Council; Pi Gamma Mu.
56
Edwin B. Hoag
.S. Journalism
Merrick, N. Y.
Pi Gamma Mu ; The Southern ; Portico Club
Ruth Earles Hodge
A.B. Sociology
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Gamma Mu.
Earl Ormond Hollowell
B.S. Social Studies
Goldsboro, N. C.
Water Ski Team, Captain; Physical Educa-
tion Majors Club, President.
Bobby Joe Houser
B.S. Science
Lambda Chi Alpha; Future
America; Science Club.
James C. Houser, Jr.
B.S. Art
Jacksonville, Fla.
Phi Delta Theta, Historian;
University of Florida.
Albert Franklin Hudson
B.S. Biology
Lake City, Fla.
Transfer from
Harry La Vere Hunt
B.S. Physical Education
Washington, N. J.
Stanley T. Hyde
A.B. English
Wheaton, 111.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Intramural
Vagabonds; Tennis Team.
Sports;
57
t i t y^t-*'
Harry Elwood Iepson
B.S. Citrus
Philadelphia, Pa.
Thomas Hamilton Jackson
B.S. Business Administration
Plant City, Fla.
RussEL E. Jeanes
S. Physical Education
Richmond. Ind.
Pi Gamma Mu ; Future Teachers of America.
Lawrence Jendryczak
A.B. Psychology
Amsterdam. N. Y.
George Berry Johnson
B.S. Social Studies
Manning, S. C.
Delta Sigma Phi.
Frederick Seth Johnston
B.S. Citrus
Lakeland, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Club; Intramural Sports.
Secretary;
Tom Mabson Jordan
B.S. Business Administration
Plant City, Fla.
Lee Judin
B.S. Science
New York City, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi, Historian; Science Club;
"S" Club; Intramural Board; Track Team
Manager; Intramural Sports, Manager.
Margaret Faye Juenger
A.B. Social Studies
Lakeland, Fla.
Alpha Delta Pi.
Bernard B. Kalapach
B.S. Mathematics
Whiting, Ind.
Kappa Delta Pi.
Irwin Kalisher
B.S. Business Administration
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi, Recording Scribe, Assistant
House Manager; Senate; Hillel; Transfer
from New York University.
Charles F. Keeper
B.S. Journalism
Winnetka, 111.
The Southern, Sports Editor
Lincoln College.
Chicago, 111.
Transfer from Wright Junior College.
Carlos Eduardo Key
B.S. Science
Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico
International Club; Latin American Team.
IE"
^i
<
i
1
H
r ■
Mary Eleanor Kidder
A.B. Religious Education
Belle Glade, Fla.
Sigma Rho Epsilon; Methodist Student Move-
ment; Chorus; Choristers; Women's Student
Government Association, Treasurer, President.
Henry Love Kinnard
A.B. English
Columbia, Tenn.
Gamma Sigma Chi.
W. Robert Kitchen
A.B. French, English and Spanish
Lakeland, Fla.
Phi Sigma Kappa, Charter Member; Kappa
Pi.
Gerald Eldridge Klieger
B.S. Speech
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Portico Club; Senator; Pi Kappa Phi; Vaga-
bonds. President, Vice President; Microphone
Club. Secretary-Treasurer; Interlachen, Or-
ganizations Editor; The Southern Staff.
Mel a. Knowles
B.S. Economics
Fair Lawn, N. J.
Tau Kappa Epsilon, Vice President; Varsity
Track.
James Lloyd Knox
A.B. Religion
Tampa, Fla.
Virgil V. Koenig
B.S. Business
Yankton, S. D.
Lawrence Kraczkowsky
B.S. Business Administration
New Britain, Conn.
Varsity Crew; Lambda Chi Alpha; "S" Club
Robert Joseph Krewer
B.S. Business Administration
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Theta Chi; Intramural Sports.
Lew Marie Lacey
A.B. History
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Beta Phi; Future Teachers of America;
Transfer from the University of Georgia.
60
Charles B. Ladendorf
Business Administration
and Secretarial Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha, Senator; Kappa Delta Pi;
Future Teachers of America.
Edwin F. Lange
B.S. Economics
River Edge, N. J.
Tennis; Tau Kappa Epsilon; Intramural
Sports.
Jeanne Kosel Lange
A.B. Speech and Drama
Chicago, 111.
Alpha Chi Omega; Senate; Vagabonds, Sec-
retary; National Collegiate Players, Treas-
urer; Chorus; Intramural Sports.
William Paul Last
B.S. Biology
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Portico Club; Science Club,
Curator of Museum of Science; Vagabonds,
Vice President; Microphone Club, Vice Presi-
dent ; Transfer from Sampson College.
Lawrence Leins
A.B. English
New York City, N. Y.
Crew; "S" Club; Vagabonds;
Chi.
AuDREE F. Long
S. Business Administration
Lambda Chi Alpha, Secretary 48, President
50; Portico Club; Inter-Fraternity Council;
Senator; Secretary to Interior; South Eastern
Conclave District of Lambda Chi Alpha,
President; Who's Who.
William Harold Lopin
.S. Business Administration
Pawling, N. Y.
Tau Kappa Epsilon.
f i t • • » • '
Louis Daniel Lowe
B.S. Business Administration
Fernandina, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha; Chi Rho.
Elvin Lynn
A.B. Speech
Plant City, Fla.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Future Teachers of
America; Variety Players; Quarter Century
Club; Intramural Club.
Clayton T. Lyons
B.S. Business Administration
North Bergen, N. J.
Pi Kappa Phi, Warden; Senate; Varsity
Crew; "S" Club; Portico Club.
Neil A. Mac Donald
B.S. Biology
Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Delbert McAlister
B.S. Citrus
Tampa, Fla.
Theta Chi. Treasurer.
Patrick Wyley McBride, Jr.
A.B. Social Sciences
Jacksonville, Fla.
Gamma Sigma Chi, President; Debate Coun-
cil; Pi Kappa Alpha; Interlachen Staff;
Methodist Student Movement; Inter- Faith
Council; Who's Who; Portico Club.
Edwin L. McCollum
B.S. Business Administration
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Gamma Mu.
William Gordon McCormick
B.S., A.B. Biology and English
Science Club, President; Sigma Alpha Epsi-
lon.
Ray Allen McDougal
A.B. Education
Bunnell, Fla.
Baptist Student Union, President; Inler-Faith
Council; FTA; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Variety
Players; Transfer from St. Augustine Junior
College.
William McKenna
B.S. Business Administration
Freeport, N. Y.
Pi Gamma Mu ; Varsity "S" Club.
Donald Peter McLuskey
B.S. Business Administration
Yonkers. N. Y.
Pi Gamma Mu, Secretary ; Newman Club.
Richard Donald McNally
B.S. Journalism
Allendale, N. J.
Lambda Chi Alpha: Southern Sports Staff.
John Bernard Machold
A.B. Social Studies
Amsterdam, N. Y.
Intramural Board; Inter-Fraternity Council;
Vice President of Junior Class; Sigma Phi
Epsilon, Vice President; Portico Club.
Virginia F. Maddox
B.S. Business Administration
Mulberry, Fla.
Ruth Masler
A.B. Social Work
New York, N. Y.
Vagabonds, Treasurer; Hillel.
Robert Alvin Mallender
B.S., A.B. Psychology
Pi Kappa Alpha, President;
of America; Inter-Faith Counci
ternity Council.
Future Teachers
Inter-Fra-
63
Raymond Mattox
B.S. Economics
Winter Haven, Fla.
Lambda Chi Alpha.
Doris Elizabeth Mayfarth
B.S. Biology
Ridgewood, N. J.
Interlachen Staff; Science Club.
Nicholas Mayer
B.S. Business Administration
Chicago. 111.
Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice President; Quarter
Century Club; Intramural Sports.
Lynn Eugene Maxwell
B.S. Mathematics
Lexington. Ohio
Pi Kappa Phi; Student Senate.
Frank John Mellis
History
Mount Vernon. N.Y.
Future Teachers of America; Pi Gamma Mu;
Varsity "'S" Club; Baseball Team; Newman
Club; Portico Club.
Eva Anderson Menendez
A.B. English
Gil M. Meyer
B.S. Business Administration
New York. N. Y.
Sigma Phi Epsilon. Senator; Portico Club.
Clifford Miller
B.S. Business Administration
Maplewood. N. J.
Pi Kappa Phi. Intramural Rep., .Social Chair-
man; Intramural Sports; Varsity and Junior
Varsity Basketball.
64
Grant Lincoln Miller. Ill
A.B. English
Omaha. Nebr.
Pearl Lorraine Mingonet
B.S. Home Economics
Eustis. Fla.
Secretary Treasurer of Student Body; Vice
President of Women Student Government
Association; Home Economics Club; Future
Teachers of America; Kappa Omicron Phi;
Senator of Senior Class; Alpha Delta Pi.
Germaine Elise Moonly
B.S. Home Economics
Sarasota, Fla.
Home Economics Club; Vagabonds; Future
Teachers of America: Alpha Delta Pi; Trans-
fer from State Teachers College, Indiana,
Pennsylvania.
George Copeland Morris, Jr.
B.S. Chemistry
Auburndale, Fla.
Thomas Guy Munafo
B.S. Music Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Future Teachers of America; Symphony Or-
chestra; College Band.
James Warren Neill
A.B. Education
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Future Teachers of
America.
Carl Norbert Neth
S. Business Administration
Jacksonville, Fla.
Theta Chi, Secretary; Intramural Sports.
KuwaNishimura
A.B. Psychology
Tokyo, Japan
65
•>:#/# •'♦.•^♦'•>> >■■
Lewis Daryl Ober
B.S. Biology
Pittsburgh, Penn.
Joseph James O'Brien
B.S. English
Tenafly, N. J.
Tau Kappa Epsilon; Intramural Sports.
James Gordon Ogden, III
B.S. Biology
Lakeland, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Interlachen, Editor-in-
Chief; Kappa Delta Pi, Treasurer; Portico
Club; Who's Who; FTA; Science Club; In-
tramural Manager.
Betty Anne Owsley
B.S. Business Administration
Orlando, Fla.
Alpha Delta Pi. Treasurer; Cap and Gown;
Senate; Secretary Treasurer of Student Body;
Interlachen Staff; Who's Who; Intramural
Board.
Hark Moon Paik
B.S. Business Administration
Seoul, Korea
International Club.
June Elizabeth Parish
Elementary Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Beta Sigma Omicron; Kappa Pi; Newman
Club; Chorus; Spanish Club; FTA; Transfer
from Florida State University.
John Howard Peck
B.S. Economics
A.B. Spanish
.Shreveport, La.
Pi Gamma Mu; International Club; Newman
Club.
Barbara Peel
A.B. Physical Education and English
Lakeland, Fla.
Alpha Chi Omega; FTA; Kappa Delta Pi;
Who's Who; Cap and Gown.
66
Basil Rocky Pegg
B.S. Physical Education
Lynn, Ind.
Thefa Chi, President; President Senior Class;
Varsity "S" Club, Vice President; Varsity
Basketball; IFC; Senate; FTA; Transfer
from Earlham College.
Christine E. Pierce
B.S. Business Administration
Bartow, Fla.
FTA.
Emil Joseph Powella
B.S. Music
Clifton, N. J.
Orchestra.
Edward John Prach
A.B. English
Long Island, N. Y.
Theta Chi, Secretary; Intramural Sports; In-
dustrial Arts Club.
Russell Howard Pritchard
B.S. Business Administration
Roseland, N. J.
Sigma Phi Epsilon; Vice President Senior
Class; Intramural Sports.
Harold Joseph Quis
A.B. Psychology
Union, N. J.
Transfer from Union Junior College, Union,
N.J.
Jerrald Jay Raskin
B.S. Business Administration
Chicago, 111.
Theta Chi, Chaplain: Inter-Fraternity Coun-
cil; Southern Staff; Intramural Sports.
John Percy Reynolds, Jr.
B.S. Business Administration
Flomaton, Ala.
Pi Gamma Mu; Lambda Chi Alpha, Vice
President 50-51.
67
Julian Irvan Rice
B.S. Accounting
Tampa, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha.
William R. Richards
B.S. Sociology
Lakeland, Fla.
Pi Gamma Mu, President, Secretary; Portico
Club; Who's Who; Sociology Club; South-
ern Round Table; Inter-Fraternity Council;
Los Picaros de Cervantes; Sigma Alpha Ep-
silon. President, Vice President.
Nancy McCracken Roberts
B.S. Elementary Education
Harrisburg, Pa.
Alpha Chi Omega; Transfer from University
of Pennsylvania.
Raymond Elzie Roberts
B.S. Accounting
Fort Meade, Fla.
George Norman Robinett
Business Administration
Williamson, W. Va.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Intramural Sports; Transfer
from West Virginia Institute of Technology.
Donald Francis Rock
A.B. Religion
Hyannis, Mass.
Gamma Sigma Chi; .Sigma Rho Epsilon;
Orchestra.
Ralph Wilson Rodgers
B..S. Journalism
Alturas, Fla.
Southern Staff, Advertising Manager 49-50;
Chorus.
Wanda J. Rogers
B.S. Elementary Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Baptist Student Union; Alpha Omicron Pi,
Corresponding .Secretary 49-50, Vice President
50-51.
68
"^Wj
C. Victor Romano
B.S. Biology
Yonkers, N. Y.
Pi Gamma Mu; Inter-Faith Council, Vice
President; Intramural Basketball Manager;
Intramural Sports; Science Club; Newman
Club; Tau Epsilon Phi, Chaplain.
R. E. "Jack" Rominger
B.S. Business Administration
Lawrenceville, 111.
Vagabonds; Chorus; Interlachen Staff; Porti-
co Club; Transfer from Eastern Illinois State
College; Kappa Pi; National Collegiate
Players; Lambda Chi Alpha.
James Leonard Ross, Jr.
B.S. Citrus
Lakeland, Fla.
Methodist Student Movement; Sigma Alpha
Epsilon.
Richard Gilbert Salisbury
B.S. Business Administration
Montville, N. J.
Manuel Joe Sanchez
Journalism
Southern .Staff, Business Manager 49-50, Cir-
culation Manager 50-51.
Daniel Connelly Saulsbury
B.S. Biology
Ridgely, Md.
Pi Kappa Phi ; Science Club.
Bertha H. Scheffler
S. Art and Religion
New York, N. Y.
Kappa Pi; Science Club.
Allan Schenkel
B.S. Business Administration
Elizabeth, N. J.
Tau Epsilon Phi, Athletic Director; Varsity
Volleyball; Junior Varsity Basketball 50;
Intramural Sports.
69
^^^^ ^f
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M:^Bib.
Grace Vivian Schumacher
B.S. Home Economics
Elniont, N. Y.
Alpha Omicron Pi, Social Chairman; Home
Economics Club, Treasurer; Transfer from
Adelphi College.
Nellie Edith Schweigart
B.S. Elementary Education
Wauchula, Fla.
Kappa Omicron Phi; Kappa Delta Pi; Alpha
Omicron Pi, Vice President 49-50; Chorus.
Walter A. Shifflett
B.S. Business Administration
Elkton, Va.
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
E. Benjamin Shimp
3..S. Citrus
Salem, N. J.
Albert Roy Seyferth
B.S. Business Administration
Fort Myers, Fla.
Industrial Arts Club; Transfer from Univer-
sity of Florida.
Rosemary Carolyn Shelfo
A.B. Spanish
Miami, Fla.
Orchestra; Chorus; String Ensemble; Spanish
Club; Home Economics Club; Newman Club.
70
Louise Spivey Sinigoi
B.S. Sociology
Lakeland. Fla.
Cap and Gown; Who's Who; Alpha Chi
Omega, Secretary; Panhellenic Council; In-
tramural Board.
Roger Andrew Sinigoi
B.S. Science
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; "S" Club; Intramural
Football; Varsity Baseball.
Mead Smith
B.S. Citrus
Palmetto, Fla.
Alpha Gamma Rho; Transfer from University
of Florida.
Roy Smith
B.S. Citrus
Palmetto, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha; Transfer from Maryville
College.
Alice Spivey
Elementary Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Kappa Delta Pi; Future Teachers of America;
Baptist Student Union, Social Vice President.
Bob William Stanley
B.S. Business Administration
Copperhill, Tenn.
Theta Chi; Intramural Football; Transfer
from Tennessee University.
Future
Variety
George L. Stansbury
B.S. Business Administration
Fort Myers Beach, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Treasurer;
Teachers of America, President;
Players.
Hans Stargardter
B.S. Mathematics
Guatemala
Hillel Foundation; International Club; Inter-
Faith Council; Science Club; Student In-
structor.
71
' .*■* .f * .•;♦:-':.'/.'
Robert H. Steenson
B.S. Physical Education
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Baseball; "S" Club.
Frederick Stepat
B.S. Business Administration
New York, N. Y.
Patricia Willadeane Stephens
A.B. Sociology
Palatka, Fla.
Women's Student Government Association,
President, Treasurer; Pi Gamma Mu; Cap
and Gown; Senate; Who's Who; Panhellenic;
Alpha Omicron Pi, President, Treasurer.
Henri Stepner
B..S. Art
Hillside, N. J.
Kappa Pi; Cap and Gown; Women's Student
Government Association; Hillel; Intramural
Board; Future^ Teachers of America; Pan-
hellenic Council, President 50; Phi Sigma
Sigma.
David Stoll
B.S. Business Administration
New York, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Student Government; In-
tramural Sports; Inter- Fraternity Council,
Scribe; Senator.
Burton Stone
B.S. Business Administration
Englewood, N. J.
Tau Epsilon Phi; Vice President of Student
Body; Varsity Basketball; Who's Who; Por-
tico Club; "S" Club; President Intramural
Board; Senator; Hillel.
Richard Allan Stork
B.S. Business Administration
Elizabeth, N. J.
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
Henry Strait, Jr.
B.S. Music Education
Catlettsburg, Ky.
Pi Alpha; Phi Sigma Kappa; Orchestra,
Treasurer; Future Teachers of America; In-
ternational Club.
72
•^P^
Frank Marcus Streetman, Jr.
B.S. Art
Sigma Phi Epsilon ; Transfer from University
of Florida.
Edward J. Strube
B.S. Business Administration
Pennington. N. J.
Tau Kappa Epsilon; Transfer from Union
College.
Helen Pipkin Strube
B.S. Education
Oviedo, Fla.
FTA; Symphonic Orchestra; Beta Sigma Omi-
cron.
Dorothy Ann Sullivan
B.S. Kindergarten
Lakeland, Fla.
Alpha Chi Omega, 1st Vice President; Pan-
hellenic President; FTA, Vice President;
Cap and Gown; Who's Who; Transfer from
Scott College.
J.AMES F. Sullivan
B.S. Sciences
Chicago, 111.
Pi Kappa Phi; Transfer from the University
of Chicago.
Richard Vernon Surgnier
B.S. Chemistry
Tampa, Fla.
Nell Surrency
B.S. Business
Gainsville, Fla.
Delta Zeta; Cap and Gown, Secretary; Pan-
hellenic; WYCA, Vice President; Intramural
Board; Sigma Rho Epsilon; Methodist Stu-
dent Movement; Inter-Faith Council.
Sherburne Bruce Sweetland
S. Mathematics
Huntington, N. Y.
Tau Kappa Epsilon.
73
, /-v */ * ^\*-J :/:
Charlotte Yvonne Talla
B.S. Social Studies
Grosse Pointe, Mich.
Beta Sigma Omicron, President; FTA; Pan-
hellenic ; Transfer from the University of In-
diana.
Thomas H. Tanaka
B.S. Prelaw
Tokyo, Japan
Who's Who.
Dikran Hrayr Taner
B.S. Business Administration
Istanbul, Turkey
Phi Sigma Kappa; Inter-Fraternity Council.
Anthony B. Tannachion
A.B. English
B.S. Biology
Bronx, N. Y.
Pi Kappa Alpha; FTA; FTA Variety Players;
Science Club; Newman Club; Debate Coun-
cil; Portico Club.
Doris M. Tanner
B.S. Elementary Education
Plant City, Fla.
Alpha Chi Omega; FTA.
Thomas Rushton Tarkleson
B.S. Business Administration
Richmond, Ind.
Theta Chi; .Senior .Senator; Cheerleader
Transfer from Earlham College.
Morton B. Tatar
B.S. Business Administration
Chicago, Illinois
Interlachen, Editor-in-Chief: Press Club; The
Southern, Organization Editor; Tau Epsilon
Phi, Secretary; Student Senate; Hillel; So-
ciology Club; Mason-Dixon Club, Secretary.
Floyd Lee Taylor
B.S. Accounting
Sebring, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha.
74
Leo Paul Taylor
Mathematics
Bartow. Fla.
Interlachen Staff; Transfer from Northeastern
University.
Robert Edward Taylor
B.S. Chemistry
Belle Glade, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Portico Club; Inter-
lachen, Business Manager; Orchestra, Vice
President; Band; Freshman Chemistry
Award: Science Club; Woodwind Quintet.
Arnold Warren Thomas
B.S. Business Administration
Yonkers, N. Y.
Tau Kappa Epsilon; Variety Crew; Pi Gam
ma Mu; Varsity "S" Club; Portico Club;
Quarter Century Club.
James Sawin Thompson
B.S. Business Administration
Davenport, Fla.
Willard Thorne
B.S. Business Administration
St. Petersburg. Fla.
Baptist Student Union.
Joseph E. Timpano
B.S. English
Newark, N. J.
Quarter Century Club.
Edward Albert Tjarks. Jr.
B.S. Citrus
Port Washington, N. Y.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Inter-Faith Council, Vice
President, President; Transfer from John B.
.'stetson University.
Bernard Julian Topfer
B.S. Biology
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tau Epsilon Phi, Vice Chancellor; Science
Club; Student Government; Intramural
Sports Manager; Varsity Volleyball.
75
tit • * » • f
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George Russell Tordy
A.B. Psychology
Great Neck, N. Y.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Varsity Crew, Captain;
Sophomore Class President; Pi Gamma Mu,
President.
Majorie Ellen Trask
B.S. Business Adminislration
Highland City, Fla.
Alpha Omicron Pi ; Panhellenic ; Intramural
Board.
William Robert Valentine
B.S. Business Administration
Richmond, Ind.
Varsity Basketball; Theta Chi; Varsity "S"
Club; Who's Who; Transfer from Earlham
College.
JuLiuM Herbert Van Blaricum
B.S. Business Administration
Cresskill, N. J.
Student Government; Inter-Fraternity Coun-
cil; Tau Kappa Epsilon, President; Phi Beta
Chi, President; Intramural Sports.
RossER Alan Waller
B.S. Business Adminstration
Eatonton, Ga.
Transfer from Mercer University
Albert Calvin Werly
A.B. Psychology
St. Petersburg, Fla.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
John Ramsey White
B.S. Psychology
Newport News, Va.
Theta Chi, Vice President; Intramural Sports;
Freshman Class President.
Betty D. Whitt
B.S. Accounting
Lakeland, Fla.
76
Harry Wilson
!.S. Business Administration
Auburndale, Fla.
Walter Roy Wilson
B.S. Business Administration
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Tau Kappa Epsilon; FTA; Senate; Inter
Fraternity Council.
William Henry Wittpenn, Jr.
B.S. Business Administration
Jersey City. N. J.
Pi Kappa Phi, Treasurer; Quarter Century
Club, President; Inter- Fraternity Council; In-
tramural Board; Varsity Basketball.
Arthur Frederick Wolford
B.S. Sciences
Port Arthur, Texas
John McKemy Woodrow
B.S. Economics
Columbus. Ohio
Thomas Kenneth Wooge
S. Business Administration
Tenafly, N. J.
Tau Kappa Epsilon, Treasurer; Pi Gamma
Mu; Portico Club; Varsity "S" Club, Secre-
tary; Varsity Basketball; Who's Who.
Ahvarez Sara Xec
A.B. English
Guatemala
Johnny Ray Youdal
B.S. Citrus
Winter Haven, Fla.
77
>•>■■>•♦.
Carlos Federico Zetina
B.S. Business Administration
Guatemala
Phi Sigma Kappa; Newman Club; Interna-
tional Club.
Donald Haines Bailie
B.S. Business and Economics
Augusta, Ga.
Pi Kappa Phi ; Industrial Arts Club.
Raymond Bernard Fox
B.S. Business Administration
Ocean City, N. J.
Mason-Dixon Club, President ; Sigma Phi Ep-
silon, President; Inter- Fraternity Council,
Vice President; Intramural Sports.
Julian Kenneth Kessler
B.S. Business Administration
Lakeland, Fla.
Lambda Chi Alpha.
John M. Macinnes
A.B. English
Plant City, Fla.
Theodore Franklin Mayor
B.S. Chemistry
Zephyrhills, Fla.
Pi Kappa Alpha, Treasurer; Science Club.
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John H. Scott
B.S. Music Education
Philadelphia, Pa.
Orchestra.
Chris Steinmetz
B.S. Business Administration
Wheeling, W. Va.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Intramural Sports
78
Richard Paul Tomlinson
B.S. Business Administration
Lakeland, Fla.
Lambda Chi Alpha; Golf Teamj; Track Team;
Varsity "S" Club.
Edwin Stephen Waters
B.S. Business Administration
Rochelle Park, N. J.
Varsity Crew, Captain; Pi Kappa Phi, Treas-
surer; Varsity "S" Club. President; Portico
Club.
Jo Anne Watts
B.S. Art
Etowah, Tenn.
Delta Zeta ; Chorus ; Kappa Pi.
Anthony Walter Rowse
B.S. Economics
Great Neck, N. Y.
interns
Russel Sinclair Acker
B.S. Biology
Sparta, N. J.
Marqueen Hellen Ayers
A.B. English
Lakeland, Fla.
Daniel Leonard Becker
B.S. History
New York City, N. Y.
79
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William L. Bencker, Jr.
B.S. Industrial Arts
Tampa, Fla.
Edward Gormley Bigler
S. Biology
Anthony John Bisaccia
A.B. Social Science
Hartford, Conn.
Evelyn Virginia Bispham
B.S. Elementary Education
Sarasota, Fla.
Dave Earl Boatwright
B.S. Education and English
Zehpyrhills, Fla.
Jacquelyn Vereen Causey
B.S. Psychology
Winter Haven, Fla.
Ivan G. Clark
B.S. Physical Education
Sebring, Fla.
Harry W. Danridge
B.S. Physical Education
Leesburg, Fla.
Gordon Earl Farron
B.S. Business Administration
Bradenton, Fla.
Francis Donald Gillard
B.S. Art
Lakeland, Fla.
Harriett Crowther Hartwick
B.S. Music Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Josephine D. Hoffses
B.S. Elementary Education
Bell Buckle, Tenn.
William John Hoffses
B.S. Elementary Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Thelma Claire Holsberry
B.S. Elementary Education
Plant City, Fla.
Mary Jane Jesse
B.S. History
Norton, Va.
Nyle Kim
B.S. Special Student
Seoul, Korea
International Club ; Industrial Arts Club.
81
Ruth Ann Klein
B.S. Physical Education
Malverne, N. Y.
Martha M. Lamb
B.S. Mathematics
Nutley, N. J.
William M. Morrow
B.S. Elementary Education
Uniontown. Pa.
S. John Orrico
B.S. History
Fanwood, N. J.
Raphael Massa
B.S. Industrial Arts
Lakeland, Fla.
Margaret Ruth Mehaffey
B.S. Music
Plant City, Fla.
Frances Lanelle Powell
B.S. Physical Education
Jacksonville, Fla.
Jeanette Turner Martin
B.S. Elementary Education
Lakeland, Fla.
Beta Sigma Omicron; FTA; Variety Players
4sr^i
82
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Robert Sherman Rhinehart, Jr.
B.S. Biology
York, Pa.
Lelia M. Riley
A.B. History
Plant City, Fla.
f
B. Faye Shaw
B.S. Music Education
Cocoa, Fla.
Oscar Leonard Smith
B.S. Industrial Arts
Tampa, Fla.
Strato Eli Telvely
B.S. Secondary Education
Bradenton, Fla.
Cecil A. Waldron
B.S. Social Studies
Ft. Myers, Fla.
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EvELY Hendry Widmer
B.S. Elementary Education
Ona, Fla.
83
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junior officers
Seated: Francis Outlaw and Jo Ferguson. Standing: Nick Tipaldo, Art Falls and
Carl Schuler.
88
ROSE ALLEGATO
Lakeland, Fla.
DIANE ALLEMAN
Buckhannon, W. Va.
MAURICE LEE ALLISON
Lakeland, Fla.
RALPH WARREN ALLEN
Hollywood, Fla.
EDWARD J. ANDERSON
Mitchell. S. D.
MARTHA ANN ANDERSON
Lake Forest, 111.
THOMAS C. ARMSTRONG
Dade City, Fla.
CHARLES GORDON ASH, JR.
Sydney, Fla.
DOLORES R. BARTLETT
Stuart, Fla.
MARILEE BEADLES
Fulton, Ky.
JACK MILLER BEARDSLEY
Springlake, Mich.
RICHARD A. BEDER
St. Petersburg, Fla.
JOHN WILLIAM BELL
Closter, N. J.
WILLIAM BENT, JR.
Claremont, N. H.
CRAIG BETTINGER
New Albany, Ind.
CHARLES BLISS
Freeport, N. Y.
RICHARD A. BOEHM
Merrick, N. Y.
WAYNE BOND
Clearwater, Fla.
JOHN R. BOOREAM
Bartow, Fla.
HOWARD S. BORDEN
Asbury Park, N. J.
NANCY ELIZABETH BOOKER
Lexington, Mass.
WILLIAM HENRY BRAATZ
St. Petersburg, Fla.
CHARLES PHILLIP BRADFORD
Winter Garden, Fla.
JOANNE BRADSHAW
Wilmette, 111.
BETTY JOAN BRANSCOMB
Orlando, Fla.
DONALD EDWIN BROTHERS
Smithfield, Va.
CHARLES R. BROWN
Hawthorne, N. J.
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RONALD F. BRUGGEMAN
Pittsburgh, Penn.
MARGARET BRYAN
Bowling Green, Fla.
CYNTHIA B. BRYANT
Lakeland, Fla.
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PATSY ANN BUHRER
Harrington Park, N. J.
SELBY R. BURCH
Winter Garden, Fla.
HAROLD CAILLOUET
New Orleans, La.
EDWARD MURRAY CARLTON
Fort Myers, Fla.
GENE R. CAVANAUGH
Tallahassee, Fla.
ERIC T. CLARKE
Lakeland, Fla.
DANIEL C. CLARKE
Jacksonville, Fla.
JAMES J. CLARK
Holly, Mich.
ROBERT- GRIFFITH CLARK
Pennington, N. J.
VERNON LEWIS CLARK
Tampa, Fla.
BURIE WEBSTER CLEMENTS
Mulberry, Fla.
ROBERT EDWARD CLOANINGER
Eastoner, S. C.
JEAN ELLEN CLOUSE
Lakeland, Fla.
WILLIAM M. COGAN
West Orange, N. J.
JOHN G. COLLINS
Chicago, 111.
, ■••;.»■ t. ''a'; *.* i,J
JACK GORDON COPELAND
\ ero Beach, Fla.
ALFRED HOWARD CRAWFORD
Sebring, Fla.
JEANNIE CROSBY
Citra, Fla.
WILLIAM FRANK CROSSMAN
Arlington, Va.
MARY ANN CROWSON
Chicago, 111.
PAUL S. DEVLIN
Ridgewood, N. J.
KEN DEWEY
Palm Beach, Fla.
JULIAN H. DONDIS
New York, N. Y.
WILLARD RAE DRAPER
Rockville Centre, N. Y.
CHESTER HAROLD BUBOIS
West Orange, N. J.
MAYSELE VALERIA DUDEK
Newton, Iowa
RAYMOND E. DYER
Haddonfield, N. J.
»1
MACK EDWARDS
Li
LEON C. ELLIS
Tampa, Fla.
SARAH ISABEL EQUARAS
Havana, Cuba
44
DICK FAGAN
New York, N. Y.
WILLIAM ELLIOTT FAXON
Starke, Fla.
BILL ADRIAN FELTON
St. Petersburg, Fla.
JO ANNE FERGUSON
Leesburg, Fla.
JOYCE ANNE FINSON
Southampton, Long Island
WILLIAM ALAN FISACKERLY
Jacksonville. Fla.
WILLIAM ERASER, JR.
Colwyn, Pa.
RICHARD ALDEN FREEMAN
New York, N. Y.
ALLAN LEWIS GEIGER
Bayonne, N. J.
BYRON PAUL GEORGE
Endicott, N. Y.
SALVATORE GIARDINA
Leonia, N. J.
EARL GEORGE GILLMAN
St. Petersburg, Fla.
JAMES HAYDEN GILMORE
Traverse City, Mich.
RUTH GLORIA GOLDSTEIN
Brooklyn, N. Y.
JOSEPH WILLIAM GROSS
Bridgeport, Conn.
BARBARA CLAIRE GUNNING
Lakeland, Fla.
LYLE MILTON HADLER
Largo, Fla.
ROBERT ERVING HAMILTON
River Forest, 111.
ROBERT B. HARN
Clearwater, Fla.
JAMES EDWARD HART
Bartow, Fla.
L. DWIGHT HASKINS
Chicago, 111.
PETER E. HASTINGS
Lakeland, Fla.
PAUL RICHARD HEALY
North Hero. Vt.
MILLIE HENDRY
Wauchula, Fla.
JACK HERR
York, Penn.
GEORGE A. HIEBER
Merrick. N. Y.
JULIA ANN HIRSCHMAN
St. Petersburg, Fla.
MARY EVELYN HOLLADY
Tampa, Fla.
MARGARET LOUISE HUBBARD
Bradenton, Fla. ^j>l*„./7^i*>v>-<»
ELISE HUGHES
Camilla, Ga.
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LAWRENCE HAROLD HURTT, JR.
St. Louis, Mo.
JANICE IVEY
Decatur, Ga.
BARBARA CLAIRE JACKSON
Lakeland, Fla.
VERN DONALD JACOBS
Medina, N. Y.
AVIS DANIELS JAMESON
Bradley Jet., Fla.
LESLIE ANNE JAMESON
St. Cloud, Fla.
JESSE EDWARD JONES
Tampa, Fla.
NORMAN BIRCHARD JUNE
Endwell, N. Y.
MARILYN CHRISTINE KASPAR
Tampa, Fla.
HOWARD E. KIDDER
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
JANE ELIZABETH KILGORE
St. Petersburg, Fla.
ELMO RONALD KIRKLAND
Orlando, Fla.
GERALDINE KOESTNER
Oradell, N. J.
WILEY E. KOON
Lakeland, Fla.
MARY LINDA LASHLEY
Lakeland, Fla. ^ >0
MARGARET ROSA LYNN LAW
Maryville, Tenn.
WILLIAM HUNTER LEAZER
Ridgewood, N. J.
HERBERT WILLIAM LILLEY
Lakeland, Fla.
MARJORIE LILLEY
Lakeland, Fla.
MARION C. LIPP
Tulsa, Okla.
ARTHUR AUGUSTINE LODATO
Lakeland, Fla.
RAYMOND A. LONG
Lakeland. Fla.
JAMES WARREN LUSINK
Rochester, N. Y.
MARY MacGREGOR
Atlanta, Ga.
EVALINA ROSE McINTOSH
Lakeland. Fla.
ARTHUR HENRY McMILLAN
Jacksonville. Fla.
JOHN PETER MANCINI
Fair Lawn. N. J.
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ANDREW EDWARD MARSHALL
Wheeling. W. Va.
JOE E. MARSHBURN
Miami, Fla.
ELIZABETH JANE MAXWELL
Plant City, Fla.
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ROBERT S. MEGOW
Lakeland. Fla.
JOE T. NELSON
Miami, Fla.
RAY NESBITT
Belleview, Fla.
THEODORE NICHOLAS
Aldan, Penn.
JAMES WILLIAM NOBLE
Tampa, Fla.
ALAN LEE NOVAK
Lakeland, Fla.
ROGER A. O'BYRNE
Greeley, Colo.
ROGER OUILLETTE
Elizabeth. N. J.
FRANCES LOUISE OUTLAW
Miami, Fla.
RANDOLPH GIBSON OWSLEY
Lake Forest, 111.
EARL EDWARD PARSONS
Lakeland, Fla.
RUSSELL M. PELLETIER
Chicago, 111.
NICHOLAS PITURAS
New York, N. Y.
EARL EDMUND POWERS
Mulberry, Fla.
CHARLES W. PUGH
Lakeland, Fla.
GEORGE A. RAYMOND
North Weymouth, Mass.
JOSEPH R. REDDING
Halira, Ga.
LOIS LOUISE REDDING
Miami, Fla.
JOAN MARGARET REDMOND
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
HAROLD R. RELOS
Chicago, 111.
ROBERT NELSON RISLER
Washington, D. C.
PAT ROBERTSON
Miami, Fla.
RICHARD J. ROHMANN
Johnstown, Penn.
DICK ROWE
Cranford, N. J.
CLAUDE H. RUDDER
Scottsboro, Ala.
RONALD LEE RUSSELL
Miami, Fla.
WILLIAM M. RUSSELL
Winter Haven, Fla.
CARL SANDUSKY
Arcadia, Fla.
IRM SCHMELZER
Lake Forest, 111.
HENRY M. SCHMIDT
Vero Beach, Fla.
CARL PAUL SCHULER
Fanwood, N. J.
JOHN H. SCOTT
Philadelphia, Penn.
MARION PHELPS SEDWICK
Lacoochee, Fla.
JAMES B. SELLERS
Bartow, Fla.
CHARLES ALBERT SEYMOUR
Winter Haven, Fla.
EDWARD EUGENE SHOUPE
Tampa. Fla.
ROBERT LEE SIPES
Litchfield, 111.
JACK B. SKEEN
Highland City, Fla.
DONALD E. SLAVIN
Chicago, 111.
DAVID LLOYD SMITH
Miami, Fla.
ALEX SOSIK
Bridgeport, Conn.
JAMES HENRY STEPP
Tampa, Fla.
PETER WELLINGS STILES
Hollywood, Fla.
EVE F. STONE
Rockville Centre, N. Y.
MAHLON C. STOUT
Sparta, N. J.
AUGUST JOHN STURM
Indianapolis, Ind.
ARLENE MARIE THOMAS
Corning, N. \.
MARIE JEAN TILLEY
Clearwater, Fla.
NICHOLAS T. TIPALDO
Island Park, N. Y.
JUNE MYER TISON
Tampa, Fla.
JOAN TURBETT
Chicago, 111.
VERA V. TORDY
Tampa, Fla.
GEOFFREY U. UYEHARA
Tokyo, Japan
W. H. VAN ARSDALE
Elizabeth, N. J.
LURELLE MIDGE VERPLANK
Springlake, Mich.
JAMES HALL VICKERS
Jacksonville, Fla.
MARY BESS VIVION
Nashville, Tenn.
WILLIAM HUGH WAKEMAN
Orlando, Fla. jj
BEATRICE WALLING<j:;yl/«-»- ^- ^^^ "^
New Port Richey, Fla.
DAVID ERNEST WALLOM
Lakeland, Fla.
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BARBARA ANNE WARNE
Miami Beach, Fla.
PAGE A. WATSON, JR.
Chicago, 111.
DAVID STUART WEEKS
Delray Beach, Fla.
KENNETH E. WEIGEL
Trenton, N. J.
ELMER PAUL WESTBERRY
Fort Ogden, Fla.
HAZEL ELOISE WHITEHEAD
Ponce de Leon, Fla.
ROBERT W. WILLIAMS
Tampa, Fla.
HELEN KATHRYN WILLIAMS
Oak Park, 111.
RICHARD LEON WILSON
Scotch Plains, N. J.
GEORGE A. WOLFE
Orlando, Fla.
RICHARD LEE YATES
West Palm Beach, Fla.
MASAMICHI YONEYAMA
Tokyo, Japan
WILLIAM S. ZUBER
Richmond, Ind.
KENNETH LEO ZULICK
Pine Grove, Penn.
MILDRED BIGHAM
Leesburg, Fla.
WILLIAM LIU
Hongkong, China
WILLIAM F. MILAZZO
Metuchen, N. J.
LEE H. PEARSON
Miami, Fla.
WILLEAM D. PITTEW
Kenilworth, N. J.
NANCY R. SWEAT
Tampa, Fla.
JENORA IMOGENE WEIMER
Clearwater, Fla.
102
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sophomore officers
The Sophomore officers pictured are Bob Williams, Kathy Marone, and Mary Carlo.
106
LEONARD STEVEN ADAMS
Interlaken, N. J.
THEODORE HOBSON ALLEN
Bradenton. Fla.
BETTY ANN ANDERSON
Lake Wales, Fla.
ERLE ARDEN ANDERSON
Avon Park. Fla.
KENNETH C. ANDERSEN
Huntington, N. Y.
ROLAND HASSEL ANDERSON
Lakeland, Fla.
PRISCILLA JOYCE ATWOOD
Deland, Fla.
HAROLD HOWARD BARBER
Middletown, Ind.
J. MICHAEL BARLOW
Lansdowne, Penn.
MANUEL BARO
Palma Soriano, Cuba
JOHN G. BEAUMONT
Cowden, 111.
BRYAN S. BELCHER
Orlando, Fla.
AUDREY IRENE BERNER
Rochester, N. Y.
ALBERTO BLANCO
Havana, Cuba
CHESTER LEON BLUM
Middlesex, N. J.
CHARLES HARLEY BOOTH
Clinton, Iowa
107
ARNOLDO GERARDO BORREGO
Pinar del Rio, Cuba
FREDERICK RAYMOND BRANT
Fort Lee, N. J.
JOYCE LOUISE BRITTAN
Southampton, N. Y.
ELIZABETH BROWN
Lakeland, Fla.
ALLEN R. BRUSH
Huntington, N. Y.
JAMES F. BUCHAN
Fort Pierce, Fla.
VELMA LEE BUFFO
Millburn, N. J.
HAROLD WILFRED BURG
Tenafly, N. J.
JACQUELINE LEA BURNSIDE
Tampa, Fla.
JOAN ELIZABETH BURR
Lake Worth, Fla.
JOHN MARTIN CALLAWAY
Bradenton, Fla.
WENDELL ALLEN CANNON
Lakeland, Fla.
ROBERT K. CANTWELL
Clermont, Fla.
MARY CARLO
Miami, Fla.
FRANK D. CARTER
Asheville, N. C.
ANTHONY M. CARUSONE
Amsterdam, N. Y.
JOAN IRENE COLE
Plant City, Fla.
BARBARA JEANNE COLTON
Muskegon, Mich.
WILLIAM THOMAS CONNELL
Avon Park, Fla.
WILLIAM COVELL
New York, N. Y.
MARION H. CROSLAND
Lakeland, Fla.
MONICA KARLENE DARLING
Sarasota, Fla.
JOAN DEDMON
Washington, D. C.
WILLIAM LEE DENNIS
West Palm Beach, Fla.
LAWRENCE E. DENSLOW
Tampa, Fla.
JOHN ROBERT DOBAK
Whiting, Ind.
FRED STAN DUDNEY
Tampa, Fla.
JACQUELINE ANN EARL
Hinsdale, 111.
ARTHUR LEE EBERLY
Lakeland, Fla.
GEORGE D. EDWARDS
Lakeland, Fla.
MACK EDWARDS
Tampa, Fla.
ADRIENNE PHILLIPS ELLER
Tampa, Fla.
109
JULIE A. EVANS
Paterson, N. J.
DAVID B. FAHNESTOCK
Lakeland, Fla.
NANCY RUTH FARMER
St. Petersburg, Fla.
GARY R. FARRAR
St. Petersburg, Fla.
RENATTA THERESA FILEWICZ
Clearwater, Fla.
ANNE FOU.ST
Owensboro, Ky.
GEORGE HENRY FRANK
Naples, Fla.
JESSIE FREELING
Miami, Fla.
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EDUARDO GAVIRIA
Manizales-Columbia, S. A.
CATHY C. GIANDELIA
Ridgefield, N. J.
LAWRENCE D. GOODMAN
Huotington, N. Y.
RICHARD V. HAESELER
Brooklyn, N. Y. -
DICK L. HANSON
Oak Park, 111.
PETER WADE HANSON
Midland, Mich.
DON B. HAMMOND
Wilmette, 111.
NORMA ELLEN HARRIS
Homosassa, Fla.
PATRICIA LOUISE HARWOOD
Tampa, Fla.
KATHRYN FLORENCE RAYMOND
West Palm Beach, Fla.
ANN FRANCES HENNESSEY
West Palm Beach, Fla.
JEANNE M. HOLBROOK
Shaker Heights, Ohio
DONALD T. HORSEY
Harrington Park, N. J.
HOWARD KENNETH HOSTLER
Winter Haven, Fla.
EVELYN LOUISE HUGHES
Winter Haven, Fla.
LOTTIE DUDLEY lEPSON
Leesburg, Fla.
HAROLD E. JAYSON
Newark, N. J.
HUGH JONES JOHNSON
Plant City, Fla.
PHILIP HAMPTON JOHNSON
Plant City, Fla.
BETTY LEE JOHNSTON
Nokomis, Fla.
EZRA H. JONES
Lakeland, Fla.
EDWARD G. JUDSON
Newburgh, N. Y.-
SALLIE ELAINE JUMP
Oak Park, 111.
JOANNE PATRICIA KILPATRICK
Bradley Junction. Fla.
CAROLYNE JEAN KING
Lake Hamilton. Fla.
IRWIN KOLIKOFF
New York, N. Y.
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JOSEPH PAUL KOVALSIK
St. Petersburg, Fla.
MARVIN "BABE" KUMM
Newton, Iowa
JUSTIN V. LANE
Plant City, Fla.
GARRY E. LENT
Fort Montgomery, N. Y.
MARGARET RAE LEROY
Boca Grande, Fla.
SHIRLEY LUFFMAN
Ocala, Fla.
JOAN J. iMcLACHLAN
St. Ignace, Mich.
JAMES MILTON MARLOWE
Jacksonville, Fla.
i
KATHRYN ANN MARONE
Sarasota, Fla.
FAUSTINO MENENDEZ
Havana, Cuba
NANCY ANN MEREDITH
Asheville, N. C.
BUTLER MILES
Grosse Pointe, Mich.
GRACE MILLER
Stanford, Conn.
NANCY LEE MORROW
Miami, Fla.
BROOK NELSON
Mamaroneck, N. Y
DOROTHY LUCILLE NIBLACK
Oviedo. Fla.
LOUISE NICHOLS
Wilmette, IlL
JOE WILLIAM NUTTER
Lakeland, Fla.
RALPH DAVID NYBAKKEN
Des Plaines, 111.
MARK N. OHNIKIAN
New York, N. Y.
ANTONIO ORTEGA
Havana, Cuba
HARRIETT OWENS
Roanoke, Va.
EARL PARSONS
Washington, D. C.
THOMAS JAMES PATTERSON
Philadelphia, Penn.
WILBERT PAUL PETERSON
Rockford, 111.
FLOYD LEIGH PHILLIPS, JR.
Graham, N. C.
ALVA G. PIPKIN
Mulberry, Fla.
BETTY ANN POUND
Cocoa, Fla.
CECELE POWELL
Toronto, Canada
SILVER I. RAMZY
Santaana, Calif.
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BERNARD READING
Lakeland, Fla.
MIRIAM ERNESTINE REDDICK
Benevolence, Ga.
ROBERT L. REID, JR.
Jacksonville, Fla.
JANET ROBERTS
Springfield, Mass.
MARY F. ROBERTS
Ridgeway, Va.
MORTIMER A. ROGERS
River Edge, N. J.
MARCIA ROLAND
Park Ridge, 111.
MARGALO ANN ROLLER
Winter Haven, Fla.
SUZANNE ROSE
West Palm Beach, Fla.
DAVID EZRA ROSENBAUM
Plainfield, N. J.
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PATRICIA ROSS
Lakeland, Fla.
JOSEPH SANTOS, JR.
Osterville, Mass.
RICHARD N. SEARS
Tenafly, N. J.
JAMES LEONARD SEBASTIAN
Pomona, Calif.
MARY LUANN SHEERWOOD
West Palm Beach, Fla.
MARILYN DEANE SHIBLEY
Akron, Ohio
I
JOY MARIE SKINNER
St. Petersburg, Fla.
JOAN MARGUERITTE SLATER
Chicago, 111.
GERALD ANTHONY SLAVIN
Hyannis, Mass.
JOHN JAMES SMITH
Oak Park, 111.
JUNE LOUISE SMITH
Linesville, Penn.
FRITZ STARGARDTER
Guatemala City, Guatemala
CLINTON FISK STEUERWALD, JR.
Valatie, N. Y.
PHILLIP H. STIGLEMAN
Richmond. Ind.
NANCY ANN STRIBLING
Ashland, III.
SALLY RUTH STRITE
Sarrento, Fla.
MARTHA TAYLOR
Mims, Fla.
ROSEMARY TAYLOR
Nashville, Tenn.
WILLIAM MARVIN TERRY
Jacksonville, Fla.
RUTH V. THOMPSON
Chicago, 111.
EARLINS RAYMOND THONNESON
St. Petersburg, Fla.
SALLY JANE TOOKE
Tampa, Fla.
15
VIRGINIA TOWNSEND
Glendale, Mo.
BOBBYE SUE THREADGILL
Loyall, Ky.
GARY O. THREADGILL
Harlan, Ky.
ROLAND D. VANZANT
Jacksonville, Fla.
NATCHO VASILEFF
Asbury Park, N. J.
JEANNE CLAUDIA WARNER
Tampa, Fla.
CYRUS EARL WEBB
Oklahoma City, Okla.
ROGER RAY WELCH
Montague, Mass.
GEORGE A. WHITE
Fairfax, Va.
A. BURT WHITING
Sebring, Fla.
JACK WEBSTER WILLIAMS
St. Petersburg, Fla,
KENDRICK DUKES WILLIAMS
Lakeland. Fla.
ROBERT P. WILLIAMS
Lakeland, Fla.
WM. KENNETH WILLIAMS
Oak Park, 111,
HERBERT GARDNER WILSON, JR.
Cranford. N. J.
HELEN WOLFE
St. Augustine, Fla.
RICHARD HENRY WOOD
Lakeland. Fla.
WILLIAM HUBERT WRIGHT
Zephyrhills, Fla.
BETTY ANN WYLLYS
Hastings. Fla.
DAVID MITCHELL YEAGER
Sebring. Fla.
GLORIA JUNE YOUNT
Cocoa Beach, Fla.
NOR.MAN DAVIS
Bradenton. Fla.
JULIA LAW McCALLA
Charleston, W. Va.
ESTRELLA GIL MENDOZA
Havana, Cuba
NICHOLAS EDWARD PELLEGRINO
Stratford, Conn.
JOSEPH ROBERT PRICE
Lakeland, Fla.
JOSE SUAREZ RODRIGUEZ
Havana, Cuba
17
ft
'^^f^if,
^n
freshman officers
Seated: Nancy Fay, Genniene Collins, and Denise Stevens. Standing: Dave Fredricks
and Jim Luce.
122
VIC STANLEY ABBOT
Freeport, N. Y.
RICHARD BRUCE ADAMS
Old Greenwich, Conn.
LYDIA ALDRICH
Caguas, Puerto Rico
NANCY ALICE AMIS
Lake Wales, Fla.
MANUEL GATY ALVAREZ
Creufuegos, Cuba
STUART LOGAN ANDERSON
Homewood, 111.
JOANNE PAULA ANTONS
Marine City, Mich.
SAYMAR ARTIGAS
Holguin Orte, Cuba
NORMA VIRGINIA BARWICK
Plant City, Fla.
SYLVIA JOY BEARSE
Harwich Port, Mass.
FRANCIS JOSEPH BERCKMAN
Chester, Penn.
DONALD FRANK BERGH
Manhasset, N. Y.
DAVID V. BETHANY
Philadelphia, Miss.
INA MARLENE BLACK
Plant City, Fla.
JOAN ELIZABETH BLEDSOE
Winter Park, Fla.
ART BOGLIO
Tampa, Fla.
HUBERT THOMAS BOURNIQUE
Maplewood, N. J.
GEORGE W. BOST
Plainfield, N. J.
123
BILLY FRANK BOYD
Lakeland, Fla.
RONALD TOLBERT BRASWELL
Lakeland, Fla.
JOHN A. BROOKS
Bartow, Fla.
HAZEL HARRIET BURNS
Quincy, Fla.
ROBERT HARRISON BUTZ
Orlando, Fla.
JOHN PASCO CADE
Seville, Fla.
RUDY VINCENT CANTARINI
Brooklyn, N. Y.
SHIRLEY JUNE CANTWELL
Clermont, Fla.
ROBERT J. CARMITCHELL
Lancaster, Penn.
ADAM JERALD CARLTON
Tampa, Fla.
HELEN CULA CHAMPION
Orlando, Fla.
MARILYN JEAN CLARK
Richmond, Ind.
ANITA JOYCE CLEAPY
St. Petersburg. Fla.
PAT ANN CLEGG
Tallahassee, Fla.
JAMES SANTIAGO COCKCROFT
Maracaibo, Venezuela
JEANNINE COLLINS
Carlisle, Ohio
DONALD MOORE CONRAD
Hackensack, N. J.
LAWRENCE GERALD CORBEY
Huntington, N. Y.
124
Ihw".- f_-_---.-
JAMES M. CREWS
Ocala, Fla.
CHARLES KENNETH CRISS
Lakeland. Fla.
LUCY ANNE CROFT
Hernando, Fla.
CORLISS SEVILLE CROSS
Rockford, 111.
NANCY LEE DARRAGH
Chicago. 111.
QUIDO ANTHONY D'AGOSTINO
Brooklyn, N. Y.
LIANA FRANCES DAVILA
Santurce, Puerto Rico
NORMAN A. DAVIS
Bradenton, Fla.
DOROTHY ANN DEAL
Ankona. Fla.
NONA JOAN DENHOLTZ
Newark, N. J.
WILLO G. DENNARD
Lakeland, Fla.
DAVID ROSS DENSLOW
Tampa. Fla.
MARILYN LOUISE DILL
University City, Mo.
FRANK G. DEO
Flushing, N. Y.
CAROL DICKSON
Kewanee, 111.
JO ANN DIXON
Tampa, Fla.
CHARLES W. DOUGLAS
Lakeland, Fla.
JOHN E. DRONDOSKI
Easthampton, Mass.
!25
ALLAN LEROY DUNN
New Brunswick, N. J.
HARRY R. ELLIOTT
Lakeland, Fla.
JOHN CHRISTIAN ELLIS
West Palm Beach, Fla.
RUTH ELLIS
Emporia, Va.
JOHN H. ENGLISH
Lakeland, Fla.
PEGGY CAROLYN FAILE
Plant City, Fla.
NANCY ELIZABETH FAY
St. Petersburg. Fla.
OUIDA LOUISE FIELDS
Avon Park, Fla.
ROBERT KEN FIELDS
Miami, Fla.
DONALD FISHER
Pittsburgh, Penn.
WALTER JOHNSON FITZGERALD
iMilton, Vt.
GEORGE W. FLACK. JR.
Winter Haven, Fla.
MAURICE EMILE FLEURY
New Auburn, Maine
ROBERT G. FORREST
Hagerstown, Ind.
WILLIAM FRANCIS FOX
Highland Park, N. J.
CEDRIC CULBERTSON FRENCH
Babylon, Long Island, N. Y.
GILBERT GEORGE FRYER
Livingston, N. J.
WESLEY HARBERT FRYER
Livingston, N. J.
^m
I I
126
JOSEPH RUSSELL GARRISON
Myrtle Beach. S. C.
ROBERT D. GERDY
Manitowish Waters, Wis.
GEORGE ALEXANDER GIVEN
Miami, Fla.
CHRISTINE MARIE GOODRICH
Paramus. N. J.
RICHARD GEORGE GODFREY
Milwaukee, Wis.
BOB GORDON
Daytona Beach, Fla.
PATRICIA ANNE GRAVATT
Nutley, N. J.
DOROTHY ROBERTA GREY
Cornwall, N. Y.
JO GRUBER
Clearwater, Fla.
^1
^'
VAUGHAN SMITH GRUNDY, JR.
Princeton, N. J.
VICTOR LEE HACKMAN
White Pigeon, Mich.
SUSAN JEANETTE HAMILTON
Tampa, Fla.
EDWARD KNUDE HANSEN
Fort Myers, Fla.
ALAN EDWARD HARWOOD
Tampa. Fla.
RAYMOND ELGIN HASKELL
Cleveland, Ohio
JOICE HAYDEN
Galion, Ohio
MARILYN ROBERTA HAZELWOOD
Jacksonville, Fla.
MARILYN JEAN HELLERUD
St. Louis, Mo.
127
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^ .J
ALFRED HUFF
Amityville, N. Y.
NANCY ELIZABETH HUGHES
Washington, D. C.
G. PATRICIA JAPPE
Richmond Hill, N. Y.
BARBARA RUTH JOHNSON
Ridgewood, N. J.
JOHNNIE KATE JOHNSON
Atlanta, Ga.
JAMES ANAK JONES
Turkey Creek, Fla.
CHARLIE DAVID HENDRY
Fort Myers, Fla.
MARVIN P. HENRICH
Detroit, Mich.
JOHN E. HENSHALL
Lakeland, Fla.
MARJORIE LILLIAN HETHERINGTON
Avon Park, Fla.
WILLIAM LOUIS HOBSON
Sarasota, Fla.
SALLY HODGES
Leland, Miss.
HARRY RICHARD HOLMAN
Vero Beach, Fla.
CARL EDWARD HOON
Kansas City, Kan.
PATTIE ANNA HOWALT
Jacksonville, Fla.
vl
J
THOMAS WATSON JONES
Ormond Beach, Fla.
JACQUELINE H. KARASIK
New York, N. Y.
DONALD HOLLAND KELLER
Plant City, Fla.
..'^x^ .. A
i». im
128
DAISY ELIZABETH KENDRICK
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
BARBARA JEAN KENYON
Canfield. Ohio
MARGARET KILLARS
Tampa, Fla.
WILLIAM W. KING
Gary. Ind.
ROBERT GEORGE KIPP
Oak Park, 111.
JOHN FREDERICK LARSON
Sparta, N. J.
DRUCILLA LYNNE LAURENCE
St. Johns, Mich.
LORELI ANN LAYER
Pontiac, 111.
ROBERT EUGENE LEE
Huntington, Ind.
i #1
,1^^
DORIS E. MARTIN
Lakeland, Fla.
JANICE EMMA MARTIN
High Springs, Fla.
ROBERT BURRELL MARVIN
Matawan, N. J.
JUNE MARIE MATTESON
Binghamton, N. Y.
MARCIA JANET MATZNER
Stamford, Conn.
GEORGE McCORMICK
St. Petersburg, Fla.
DOLORES Mcknight
Starke, Fla.
LEWIS CLYDE McMILLAN
Fort Meade, Fla.
HUGH McMILLEN
Broomall, Penn.
JOHN KIRKLAND LENHER
Vero Beach, Fla.
JUDY CAROLYN LEONARD
Miami, Fla.
BARBARA JEAN LINVILLE
Raleigh, N. C.
JAMES CECIL LOGAN
Pulaski, Va.
JAMES E. LUCE
Pelham, N. Y.
THOMAS J. LUPOSELLO
Harmon, N. Y.
ALICE MARILYN LUSK
Manchester, Tenn.
MARJORIE RUTH MANSUR
Concord, N. H.
ENRIQUE MARIMON
Santiago de Cuba, Cuba
130
RITA MEYERHOFF
Clermont, Fla.
CAROLYN ANN MOORE
Clarksburg, W. Va.
HAZEL ANNE MORGAN
Savannah, Ga.
ADDIE VANCINE MORRIS
Tampa, Fla.
DICK LEROY REDMAN
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
ARTHUR A. REPPENHAGEN
Jacksonville, Fla.
JOHN MARTIN RICH
Sarasota, Fla.
DAVID HOWARD RICHARDS
Lakeland, Fla.
JACQUELINE ANN RICKERSON
Tampa, Fla.
OLGA RIVERO
Trinidad, Cuba
DOROTHY LORRAINE ROBBINS
New York, N. Y.
GWENDOLYN ROBERTS
Groveland. Fla.
PATRICIA ROBERTS
Gardiner, Maine
VILMA MARINA PINTO
Guatemala City, Guatemala
ALAN WINSLOW PLUMER
Flushing, Long Island
MARION GEORGE POHL
Washington, D. C.
KENNETH EUGENE POLLARD
Winter Haven, Fla.
CHARLES RICHARD QUEIPO
Tampa, Fla.
ESTRELLA QUINTANA
Cardenas, Cuba
HARRY DEAN RABY
Ft. Myers, Fla.
MARGARET RAINEY
Leesburg, Fla.
JAMES THOMAS REARDON
New York, N. Y.
132
PRISCILLA ROBERTS
Gardiner. Maine
CHARLES ROBERTSON
Hawthrone. N. J.
GAYLORD LONZO RODMAN
Greeley, Colo.
HUBERTO N. RODRIGUEZ
Havana, Cuba
^c
THOMAS J. ROTH
Hagerstown. Ind.
m
HOWARD BROWN ROTHENBERGER
Drexel Hill, Penn.
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^^^>^.
JEAN ALBERTA RUBUSH
Lake Hamilton, Fla.
G.
JANET M. SAULS
Avon Park. Fla.
^-^
^
PEARL FANNE SCHEINKER
Brooklyn, N. Y.
^
HAROLD SCHREIBER
New York, N. Y.
JOSEPH EPIFANIO SCUDERI
New Brunswick, N. J.
FRED ELTON SEIGLE
Rutherford, N. J.
CHARLES LEE SELPH
Lakeland, Fla.
CHARLES GEORGE SENGER, JR.
Teaneck, N. J.
CAROLYN Y. SETZLER
Albuquerque, N. M.
MARION FRANCES SHELFO
Miami, Fla.
ELANORA MARY SIKORSKI
Clearwater, Fla.
CYNTHIA ANNE SL.-VTER
Maplewood, N. J.
133
AUTHUR EDWARD STEWART
Haines City, Fla.
ROWLAND T. TACKBARY
Pittsburgh, Perm.
DOUGLAS TAN
Singapore, Malaya
MEADIE ALEXANDER TAYLOR
Emporia, Va.
HOWARD PAUL TExMPLIN
Lakeland, Fla.
L. H. TERRY, JR,
Lakeland, Fla.
MORGAN LELAND SMEAD
Pavilion, N. Y'.
ALDEN CLARK SMITH
St, Cloud, Fla,
GWENDOLYN SUE SMITH
Jacksonville Beach, Fla.
MARTIN POST SMITH
Freeport, N. Y.
MARYLIN L. SMITH
Orlando, Fla.
NANCY LOUISE SMITH
Milton Terrace, N. Y.
WINNIE SUE SMITH
West Palm Beach, Fla.
DAVID KEISS STABLER, JR.
Winter Haven, Fla,
M. DIANE THOMPSON
Lakeland, Fla.
FEN-NELL R. TH0M.4SS0N
Lakeland, Fla,
BARRY TULLY
Hackensack, N. J.
134
LUIS ENRIQUE VEITIA
Santa Clara, Cuba
CONSTANTINE LEONARD WAGNER, JR.
Trenton, N. J.
RUTH ELIZABETH WAGNER
Dunedin, Fla.
ANN WALKER
Brownsville, Tenn.
CHARLES WALKER
Manhasset, Long Island, N. Y.
MARY JUANITA WALKER
Lakeland, Fla.
^ "J f^
CHARLES WALSH
THOMAS JOSEPH WARD
Dumont, N. J.
RICHARD MARCUS WEAVER
Tampa. Fla.
ROBERT I. WEISWASSER
Brooklyn, N. Y.
JOHN JOSEPH WILKIE
Chicago, 111.
NANCEE ANN WILLIAMS
Kewanee, 111.
LOIS L. ZARNOTT
Gaylord. Minn.
F. MARCELLA ZEIGLER
Sarasota, Fla.
MICHAEL EDMUND ZELLARS
Lakeland, Fla.
MADGE LOUISE COARSEY
Jacksonville, Fla.
WALTER J. FRANZ
Merrick. N. Y.
VIRGINIA HENRY
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
MARSHALL KREUTZER
Huntington, N. Y.
LEE M. LINDE
New York, N. Y.
PATRICIA POWELL
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
135
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lambda chi alpha
Lambda Chi Alpha was founded in 1909 as a
national fraternity. Since the founding of the origi-
nal chapter at Boston University the fraternity has
risen to a membership of 46,500 men in 137 chap-
ters. It also maintains 91 alumni associations.
The Epsilon Chi chapter is the oldest national
fraternity on the Florida Southern campus and as
such has established itself as a pioneer in the vari-
ous stages of fraternal development.
Highlighting the accomplishments of the past
year was the acquisition of their Lodge, pictured at
the top right of page 157. They have the honor of
being the first fraternity on the campus to own
and operate their own chapter house.
OFFICERS
President Carl Teutsch
Vice President Nick Mayer
Secretary Dave Dykes
Treasurer Charlie Ash
Ritualist Charlie Oricco
Faculty Advisor Dr. R. E. Case
156
CHAPTER HOUSE
epsiloii chi
chapter
•^^;^'^^^^.p^^^.
Right face, y'all!
157
phi sigma kappa
Phi Sigma Kappa was founded in 1873 at the
University of Massachusetts and is a charter mem-
ber of the national Inter-Fraternity Council.
Today there are over 60 chapters with about
22.000 members. The local chapter was designated
Omega Triton after being initiated from the local
fraternity. Pi Alpha, on April 1. 1950.
Their principles compare with Jeffersonian de-
mocracy in content with the outstanding one being
that membership is open to any man regardless of
race, religion or financial status.
OFFICERS for the year were:
President Bob Kitchen
J^ice President Bill Thoenix
Secretary Frank Blakman
Treasurer Elberto Blanco
158
The baseball players of Phi Sigma Kappa.
omega . triton
chapter
MISS BETTY ANN OWSLEY, ADPi
Siveetheart of Omega Triton
The boys lend a helping hand to one of their brothers
in the buildinsr of his house.
159
pi kappa alpha
Watch out for the fire truck! No it's not the
fihning of a Mack Sennett comedy, it's just the
"Pikes" out for a little spin in their old LaFrance.
This lively chapter of rebels, the Delta Delta,
was chartered here in early 1947. It is one of 100
national chapters that contain 39.000 numbers
and are connected with 72 alumni associations.
They produced the gay and uninhibited "Pike Fol-
lies" each year at Mayhall auditorium. Scenes from
the 1950 show are produced on these pages.
OFFICERS for "51 are:
President Charles Seymour
Vice President Frank Carter
Secretary Mack Edwards
Treasurer Burt Whiting
The Lil" Red Wagon
160
Oh, you beautiful dolls!
delta delta
chapter
Christmas spirit at the "Pike" chapter house.
161
pi kappa phi
The Kapers
Since 1948, when the Beta Beta Chapter was
founded from a local group called Phi Sigma Phi.
Pi Kappa Phi has become a respected name on
this campus. Each year the Pi Kaps sponsor the
Kampus Kapers which is among the most popular
of the college shows.
The national fraternity was founded in Charles-
ton, South Carolina in 1904. The red rose is their
flower and gold and white are the official colors.
162
A Sweatheart on each arm.
beta beta
chapter
OFFICERS
President Edwin Waters
Treasurer Clayton Lyons
Historian Jerry Klieger
The Pi Kap Buggy
Placing scholarship, mutual understanding, and
brotherly love at the top of the list, the Florida
Gamma chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon has made
its mark at F.S.C.
It was installed here on November 12, 1949 and
was Southern's eighth fraternity. The national fra-
ternity was founded in 1856 at the University of
Alabama and today has 127 chapters of which
Florida Gamma is the most recent.
It has the greatest number of members and of
alumni associalions of all such national organiza-
tions.
OFFICERS
President Robert Billstrand
Vice President George Stansbury
Treasurer Page Watson
Secretary Bob Taylor
164
That famous lion.
% ':^
■»•, ■<
H ri ■M<%iiiiit
The house.
165
sigma phi epsilon
OFFICERS
President Jack Machold
Vice President Ralph Caprio
Secretary William Cogas
Treasurer Thomas Battleas
The seventh national fraternity to grace South-
ern's campus was Florida Delta of Sigma Phi Epsi-
lon, installed in May of 1949.
Born at Richmond college I now the University
of Richmond I in November of 1901, the Sig Eps
have grown to have 101 chapters with over 35,000
initiates, and 71 alumni associations.
The fraternities famed plan of finance is based
on alumni control and supervision, budgetry oper-
ation, sliding scale of assessments, is one of great
value to the collegiate chapter. This plan has been
known as the Purdue plan.
The violet and rose are the fraternity flowers,
while the magazine of the Sig Eps is the "Journal."
166
Swing those sweeps!
florida delta
chapter
Congrats . . . grads.
167
tau epsilon phi
1951 OFFICERS were:
Chancellor Arthur Eisler
Vice Chancellor Bernard Topfer
Bursar _ _ _ __ Al Sosik
Corresponding Scribe Richard Fagan
On February 1, 1947, the Tau Rho chapter of
the Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity was established on
the Florida Southern campus. TEP was the third
national fraternity and the first to be founded on
the principles of non-sectarianism.
Since that initial entry on the FSCene, TEP
has excelled in most of its undertakings.
For the past two years its athletic teams have
won the Intramural high point trophies, and the
TEP-HOP, the largest all-campus dance is always
one of the year's most brilliant events. Both of
these are indications of the fraternity's spirit and
determination.
168
Scene at the TEP-HOP at the Lakeland Yacht Club.
tau rho
chapter
The Tau Epsilon Phi Campus Queen victor in 1950, Janet Rudolph
(extreme right) and other contestants (left to right) Joan Turbett,
Gerry Gregory, and Lois Clark.
169
tail kappa epsilon
The national Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity was
founded 50 years ago at Illinois Wesleyan Uni-
versity and now has 80 active chapters and over
16,000 members.
Like many of the larger fraternities on the
campus the Beta Tau chapter is young (having been
organized in 1948) and active. Their social calen-
dar contains, for one thing, the Cherry and Red
Ball, which, incidentally, uses the fraternity colors
for its title.
However, their main purpose is to be a vital aid
in the development of the character and capacity
of their members instead of stressing merely the
social functions.
Officers for the year were: President. Bob Gan-
nett: Vice President, Jim Brugniann; Secretary,
Dick Haessler; Treasurer, Bill Lopin.
170
You won"t find these two in the group picture.
IHI
beta tail
chapter
'Wipe that smile off, pledge!
The "Tekes" present their queen, Joan Turbett, of
Alpha Delta Pi at the Red Carnation Ball.
theta chi
The encouragement of scholarship and a repu-
tation as an all-round fraternity has marked the
progress that Theta Chi has made on this campus
since it came in 1946.
As a national organization Theta Chi has 100
chapters, 34,103 members, and 47 alumni associa-
tions.
The fraternity colors are red and white and the
flower is the red Carnation. Taking an active part
in all college functions, the Gamma Delta Chapter
is living up to its motto: "Alma Mater first and
Theta Chi for Alma Mater."
172
Theta Chi Mansion — South Blvd. and McDonald St.
(
gamma delta
chapter
OFFICERS
President Fisk ToUe
Secretary Carl Neth
Treasurer Woody Woods
Faculty Advisor Prof. C. S. Giles
Swing high, swing low.
173
alpha chi omega
Btao*"*
OFFICERS
President Christine Kaspar
First Vice President Marjorie" Lilley
Second Vice President Dorothy Sullivan
Recording Secretary Louise Sinigoi
Corresponding Secretary Jeane Lange
Treasurer Joanne Bradshaw
Alpha Chi Omega was founded on October 15,
1885 at DePauw University in Greencastle. Indiana.
It came to Southern as the first national sorority
to be established on this campus on November 13,
1936. Its purpose is the advancement of the intel-
lectual, social, and moral culture of the members
and in addition to these aims is included the furth-
erance and cultivation of the fine arts.
There are 76 active chapters with the motto,
"Together let us seek the Heights." Their flower
is the red carnation and the colors are scarlet and
olive green.
174
Scooter Hockey
m^
PLEDGES
First row: L. Smith, Holbrook, Earle, Slater,
Bryan, Morrow, Harwood, Cross.
Second row: N. Smith, Williams, Nichols,
Barwick, Taylor, Johnson, Bledsoe, Amis,
Thompson, Powell.
Characters
175
alpha delta pi
Vi^
wns."
,net-
OFFICERS
President Joan Turbett
Vice President Mary Alice Grimes
Treasurer Marcia Roland
Corresponding Secretary Janice Ivey
Recording Secretary Linda Lashley
This is truly a "centennial summer" for Alpha
Delta Pi, the oldest national sorority for college
women. It was chartered on May 15, 1851, at Wes-
leyan college in Macon, Georgia, with a motto of,
"We live for each other."
The Gamma Gamma chapter, one of 79 in the
nation, was founded on this campus April 27, 1946
to promote and maintain the high scholastic, social,
and moral standards inspired by the traditions of
the sorority. Their flower is the violet and their
colors are blue and white.
176
The ADPi Deb-.
gamma gamma
chapter
PLEDGES
First row: Hodges, Warren, Tooke, Booker,
Moonly, Buhrer, Burns, Leonard.
Second row: Killars, Lauer, Roberts, Strib-
ling, Dickson, Eller. Arnold.
177
alpha omicron pi
Alpha Omicron Pi was founded on January 2,
1897 at Barnard College. Columbia University.
It came to Southern in the form of the Kappa
Gamma chapter in 1946. The fraternity has a
national philanthropic project of social service
work in the mountains of Kentucky where it main-
tains a small hospital and medical facilities.
Their color is cardinal and their flower is the
Jacqueminot rose.
OFFICERS
President Pat Stephens
Vice President Wanda Rogers
Treasurer Margaret Hubbard
Secretary Marqueen Ayers
178
,r.*v^:;»:*^l
Smile pledges !
kappa gamma
chapter
f'LED.
"• Saul's '"■ Si
'G£S
Ricke
Anions, %":' ^tcKni^u ""^^^^^on,
'''"• Fay' D^""^e;;, o ,
^' ^"ddick: ^'«-'' Page,
Take me down to the sea, boys.
179
beta sigma omicron
OFFICERS
President Joan Slater
Vice President Jane Kilgore
Recording Secretary Arlene Charles
Corresponding Secretary Janice Martin
Treasurer Joan McLachlan
Beta Sigma Omicron was founded at the Uni-
versity of Missouri on December 12. 1888. and
was installed here at F.S.C. on March 15. 1947.
It was the second national sorority to sponsor a
philanthropic project when, in 1913. it first con-
tributed to Pine Mountain Settlement School in
Kentucky.
Prior to the installation on campus BSO had left
a mark on our campus when an alumnae donated
the money for the chapel.
The sorority colors are ruby and pink: the maga-
zine is "The Urn;" and their motto is "Let us so
live that the world may be better for our having
lived in it."
180
Ka»MM
beta zeta
chapter
Meditating?
Arlene Charles
Secretary
delta zeta
second ^o.-.|5S^-^^- —
, •. G!56°^;ett.
Cat^o-
vnan
^UTTeI>
d ^°^- "B\a*'^
OFFICERS for 1951 are:
President Doris Brown
Vice President Marilyn Brown
Treasurer Dorothy Parham
Recording Secretary Nell Surrency
Corresponding Secretary Mary Carlo
Delta Zeta's colors of old rose and vieux green
have been firmly planted at Southern since Decem-
ber 6. 1936, when the Gamma Gamma chapter was
established here.
The Delta Zeta national sorority was founded
at Miami University. Oxford, Ohio, on October
24, 1902. The Killarncy rose and the diamond are
the flower and jewel of Delta Zeta; "The Lamp"
is the National magazine.
182
A couple of the DZ's and drags having fun.
gamma gamma
chapter
""'^lED,
^ofl' '°^^ On J
' -"ayes. ' ^aydp^^
A real lucky guy
183
The goal of the Phi Sigma
Sigma is social philan-
thropy. The national soror-
ity was founded at Hunter
College November 26. 191.3
and the Beta Kappa chapter
was established here April
26, 1947. There are now
over 24 alumni clubs.
Their flower is the rose
and the colors are King blue
and gold. The jewel is a
sphinx-head on gold with
blue sapphire eyes and the
national magazine is the
"Sphinx."
SeUg. ^°"=^ "^":: Karas^Vc; HeurieUa
Second ro^-^^
ner.
ytnout
Knight Anonymous i s
a new fraternal organization
on campus, having been
founded May 11, 1950, and
is independent only in the
sense that it is not affiliated
nationally.
Many of the large and ac-
tive fraternities here have
had beginnings like the
Knights, so with a look into
the future we include them
on this page.
OFFICERS are:
President
Lee Pearson
Recording Secretary
George Bost
Corresponding Secretary
Norman Davis
Treasurer
Dick Wood
184
One of the things that makes Southern a great
college is t'.ie large number of students here who
are of foreign birth and who bring European.
Asiatic, and Latin American cultures to the school.
We feel very fortunate in being able to associate
with these people and glean from them some small
part of their rich heritages, customs, and languages.
In fact the International Club itself is devoted to
fathering this relationship on both the social anci
intellectual planes.
On this page can be seen the faces of perhaps
the most representative and cosmopolitan group
of people outside the U.N. The International Club
really proves and practices that mutual understand-
ing between the United States and other countries
can exist.
185
An ambitious program to encourage the students
to take more interest and responsibility in campus
affairs started the Senate off on an eventful year.
It is comprised of the class officers as well as
the senators.
The organization meets every two weeks to
supervise and carry out many functions such as
elections, the publication of the "S" BOOK, and the
allotment of certain funds. As in the past, the
Senate also sponsored an all-campus dance.
se
xvate
186
i,^ammAf- "^saHten^i
mtet
itate^'
x<\^1
CO
,utvc^^
With the objective to promote good will, co-
operation, and understanding among the fraterni-
ties, the I.F.C. finds plenty to do throughout the
year. The organization is composed of the presi-
dent and one elected representative from each
fraternity.
t\s\eT-
Ytee
ii^en.
\,oT^g■
M\ei^'
187
'»"*-*''*'*
p^tl
'e/A
'tiic
First row: Slater, Yount, Ferguson, Sullivan. Blackwell.
Second row: Carlo, Johnston, Talla, Rowlands. Beadles, Stepner.
First row: Cruishaw, Charles. Buhrer, Stephens. Pound. Champion, Mingonet.
Second row: Stepner. Kindred. McGlaughlin, Kidder. Powell. Nichols. Rose.
Acting as a sounding
board for the sororities, the
Pan-Helenic Council i s
made up of the president
and two other members
from each sorority. As a
part of their regular func-
tions they organize cooper-
ative programs.
To make and carry out
rules to uphold the standards
of the college is the main
purpose of the Women's
Student Government Associ-
ation. Representatives are
elected from the dormitories
and sorority houses to serve
on this body.
v^ov
rtv^^
c,l\V<
^etv^%
o>jet
^xtve
tvl
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xVotv
188
^aV
atv'
A S
o
,\^
Leadership, scholarship,
loyalty, and achievement are
the qualifications needed to
belong to the honorary so-
ciety. Cap and Gown. Mem-
bers are selected at the end
of their junior year in rec-
ognition of their achieve-
ments.
Independent Women pro-
vides an active representa-
tion in campus activities for
the independent women of
the campus.
First row: Lanier, Bartlett, Tilley, Harmon, Thanas.
Second row: Brandscanbe, Dennis, Burch, Sherwood, Cole.
^M
'fi<^M
^ut
Hio
''nejj
189
'>:»>•'#■/;>;;* ^♦,
J
kappa delta pi
future teaehers of
anierica
Many of the school children of the years follow-
ing 1952 are in for a special treat in the form of
their instructors. This is due to a great extent to
the groups pictured on these two pages — the Future
Teachers of America, the Kappa Delta Pi National
Education Fraternity and the Variety Players, a
group used for recruiting of prospective teachers.
In fulfilling the aims of these three organizations
the members receive a more liberal and practical
education and in doing this become valuable and
indispensable parts of our great school system.
variety players
(91
OftJicn
!^"'CHo7 "' W £* II
^^Ppa
The highest honor obtainable by a man on
Florida Southern's campus is membership in the
Omicron Delta Kappa. Only persons of high char-
acter and high scholastic standing are eligible for
these positions.
The club was first organized in 1949 bv choosing
members who possessed the above mentioned quali-
ties and who took an active part in one of the major
campus pursuits — religion, athletics, speech, radio,
drama, art, music, or social life.
Through co-operative activitv the club hopes to
accomplish projects of benefit to the college and the
student body.
192
.!aii«^^s-=!r^„ a i^^^ijB?**-. «il% ^^
^>
«S*'i
'i;<v
v^^'.cfi:^
'^eW' ,/^TI^ift
th,
'I^^artet
^(^iitu
'y <^luh
Deciding an organization was needed for the
more mature and distinguished type of student a
bunch of the boys got together this year and
founded the Quarter Century Club. As the title im-
plies, the membership requirement is that you
be at least 25 years old. Stress is placed on sports
and the boys develop the ability to turn any con-
test they were in into a three-ring circus.
'^C£i?s
193
>■'♦•>•>.
science
ciuJb
Front row: Reddick, Frazer, Dr. Bly, Mr. Smith, McCormick, Hill.
Second row: Whitehead, Braatz, Crawford, Ogden, Bell, Dickerson.
Third row: Shefler, Last. Kirkland, Altaway, Taylor, Cone.
Fourth row: Denslow. Roc, .'Salisbury, Mayer, Romano, Coker.
With a purpose of ac-
quainting the students and
faculty with the fields of
science outside their own,
the Science Club is one of
the most active organiza-
tions on the campus. As
testimonial to this fact there
was the meeting of the Flo-
rida division of the "Ameri-
can Academy of Science"
sponsored by the club and
held here last fall.
Their other activities are
concerned with the engaging
of lecturers for their meet-
ings and practical investiga-
tions through visiting local
industrial plants.
OFFICERS are: President,
Bill McCormick; Vice Presi-
dent. Bill Fraser: Secretary-
Treasurer, Pete Ogden ;
Advisor, Dr. Bly.
As the name implies, the
Home Economics club is
composed of majors in that
field. Their main purpose
is to sponsor discussions of
the problems encountered in
home economics and to or-
ganize extra-curricular ac-
tivities to obtain practical
experience in that important
branch of social science.
OFFICERS for the year
were: President, Joan Brad-
shaw; Vice President, Mon-
ica Darling; Secretary, Pat
Ross; Treasurer, Grace Shu-
macher; Social Chairman,
June Hershman.
First row: Miss Moses, Darling, Johnston, Tison, Ross, Mrs. Selig.
Second row: Mrs. Foster, Roberts, Bradshaw, Caperton, Meredith, Hershman.
\iotwe
ecoTa<
oiu^c^
A\y^
194
tau
kaV>V
a
alip^*
The Tau Kappa Alpha
National Debating fraternity
was founded here in 1939,
The main purpose of the fra-
ternity is to engage in 15
intercollegiate debates with
schools in Florida and other
southern states.
However, the real result
of this debate training lies
within the members them-
selves in the form of added
poise, a greater degree of
self confidence, and a flu-
ency of speaking not learned
in any other way.
OFFICERS are: President,
Jim Lineburger: Vice Presi-
dent, Bob Hamilton ; Secre-
tary-Treasurer. Chester Du-
Bois: Debate Manager, Bob
Hamilton.
The Industrial Arts club,
a comparatively new organ-
ization on the Florida South-
ern campus, was founded for
the benefit of Industrial
Arts majors and minors.
Discussions, socials and
demonstrations by experts in
all phases of shop work are
the main activities of the
group.
The OFFICERS are: Presi-
dent, Charles Ash; Vice
President, John Dobak; Sec-
retary-Treasurer, Jack Hen-
shall.'
Front row: Mr. Zimmermann, Dobak, Blakwell, Smith, Crosland, Wright. Mr. Readdick.
Back row : Ash, Seyferth, Henshall, Courson, Simmons, Sellers.
^""^mrial
arts
195
The Vagabonds, under the sponsorship of Miss Gail Potter, is a club
club organized for those students who are interested in drama. Any mem-
ber of the student body has the opportunity of becoming a Vagabond if
he wishes to participate in acting, stage design, lighting, make-up, etc.
Every year the club presents plays of Broadway standard and also
workshop productions. The Little Theater on the campus serves as a
workshop. Here experimental plays are produced and directed by students.
Under the leadership of our club officers, Diane Allman, Jerry Kleiger,
Robert Hamilton and William Covell the 'Vags have completed a very
successful year on Florida Southern's campus. This year they successfully
started what they hope to continue as the first all campus social function,
the Vag Drag. And their year was fittingly brought to a close by the
spring festival of comedy's.
196
There Shall Be No Night
Molnar's — Liliom
ft •«
>/>•"#.#••#,>
''- -' .'#.^--#>^
tuike
club
Organized for the mem-
bers of the radio classes who
wish to further their inter-
ests in radio production, the
Microphone Club provides
valuable experience for its
members. Admittance i s
through try-outs of voice
testing and radio dramatic
ability.
The club, under the able
direction of Miss Potter,
presents programs over
nearby stations and also
produces an open house on
campus where the original
scripts of the students are
featured.
The Delta Nu chapter of
Alpha Psi Omega was char-
tered in 1934 as an honorary
organization to encourage
greater interests in dra-
matics.
Special requirements of
participation in plays and
other dramatic activities are
made for membership.
««ionai coll
Kneeling: Sipes, Rominger.
Standing: Klieger, Hughes, Ayers, Miss Gail Potter. Jameson, Hamilton.
egriate
Players
198
First row: Owsley, Stephens. Sullivan, Ayers,
and Surrency. Second row: Hill, Bataleas, Eu-
banks, Spivey, Eisler, and Tanaka. Third row:
McBride, Stone, Kinlaw, Long, and Pegg.
Fourth row: Allen, Fee, Valentine, Richards,
Wooge, and Odgen.
To be included in the
yearly publication, WHO'S
WHO AMONG AMERICAN
UNIVERSITIES AND COL-
LEGES, a senior must excel
in scholarship, leadership,
and service. Not only is
membership in the society
an honor to the student but
a service as well, for they
maintain a job placement
service through which mem-
bers can request employment
or admission to a graduate
school.
Candidates from Southern
are selected by a student-
faculty vote during Novem-
ber.
The pre-theological stu-
dent at Southern has an op-
portunity to better prepare
for his work and, at the
same time, promote religious
activity on the campus
through membership in the
Gamma Sigma Chi frater-
nity.
Their efforts to this end
are felt throughout the en-
tire school.
OFFICERS for the year
were President, Jim Stepp;
Vice President, Arthur Mc-
Millan.
attVTtua
Sig-
ma
clai
199
A hush settles over the crowd, the house hghts
dim. Professor Griffiths ascends the podium, raises
his baton, and another concert of the Florida
Southern College Orchestra begins. This scene is
enacted many times each year in many different
parts of the state to a multitude of music lovers
and casual concert-goers.
Southern is proud to have an orchestra of sym-
phonic size, but it doesn't restrict membership to
music majors alone. Many townsfolk, high school
musicians, and interested students take an active
part in each concert. It is very fitting that a group
of this caliber can contribute to the high cultural
standards set and maintained on this campus.
*ot^. .^,or
Direc
200
The janitor in Edge Hall is probably one of the
school's authorities on choral music, for it is his
good fortune to be entertained three hours a week
by rehearsal of the sixty voice Florida Southern
College Chorus. Every Monday. Wednesday and
Friday afternoon his work brings him near to
every type of singing from the great melodies of
Bach to the satiric verse of Gilbert-and-Sullivan
and the stirring old hymns and anthems of the
Church.
The chorus, under Professor Pfeffley, is one
of the outstanding attractions of the college — both
to those who participate and to those who enjoy
good music.
Not only is their singing of excellent calibre but
their robes are a bright red — both of which com-
bine to present quite a spectacular production at
each concert.
201
\3aV
The thirsty, hungry, and tired freshmen who
arrived at Southern during orientation week were
greeted by the welcome sight of the Baptist Stu-
dent Union refreshment stand located under the
esplanade. This "oasis" was not the only October
activity for the Union, however. Later in the month
the state convention of the organization was held
here.
After this good start they then began their rou-
tine duties of providing a link between the student
and the Southside Baptist Church, where, inci-
dentally, their meetings are held.
OFFICERS are:
President Elizabeth Brown
Vice President Arlene Thomas
Advisor Mr. Lastinger
202
Sl^
[ina
rho ep
silon
Southern-to-state-to-nation.
There in a nut-shell is the
past, present and future of
the "Servants of Religious
Education."
This year this organiza-
tion has opened chapters in
the various Florida colleges
and universities.
This is to further their
purpose of affiliating the re-
ligion student with the local
church and to acquaint him
with his chosen profession —
whether is be ministerial,
evangelical, missionary, or
social in nature.
OFFICERS for the year are:
President, Margaret Bryan;
Vice President, Marge Til-
ley ; Secretary - Treasurer,
Helen Wolfe: Publicity, Pat
Robertson : Advisor, Mrs.
Grace DeCasterline.
Worship, fellowship, and
recreation are provided at
the bi-weekly meetings of
the Methodist Student Union
at the College Heights
Church.
Designed as an alliance of
the student with the church,
the Union aptly serves its
purpose.
OFFICERS for 1951 were:
President, Jim Vickers;
Vice President, Art McMil-
lan; Secretary, Margaret
Hubbard; Treasurer, Ann
Walker; Publicity, Daisy
Kindred; Worship. Marga-
ret Bryan; Recreation. Bill
Fisackerly.
'"^^^o^st stud
eiit
^nion
203
P^ gsimna
#^p^i
ii.
Br
mu
Sociability, service, and sacrifice are three of
the high ideals set up by members of the national
social science fraternity. Pi Gamma Mu.
Through practicing these aims they hope to
further promote their purpose, which is to stimulate
and intensify the interest of students in the field
of social science. Nineteen fifty-one marks their
thirty-third year of active life here at Florida
Southern.
fesj.
204
1^ "^i
Any man who wears the white sweater with
the big "S" on it is bound to be a well liked
person about the campus.
The "S" Club is composed of men who have
lettered in Varsity sports and takes an active part
in keeping the athletic side of college before the
students.
OFFICERS this year are: Ed Waters, President;
Clayton Lyons, Vice President; Archie Eisler,
Secretary ; Larry Lyons, Treasurer.
205
Editor Mort Tator points out to staff members, Betty Anderson, Barbara
Jackson, and June Beder, what's coming up next on the Interlachen
agenda.
MORT TATAR
Editor-in-Cliiej
the interlachen
Your Interlachen is intended to be a pictorial
record of your school year. To give you the best
has been the aim of this year's staff. Often, far into
the night the light has burned in the Interlachen of-
fice while staff members tirelessly worked to meet
that inevitable deadline. They have given their best
to give you your best . . . INTERLACHEN.
Marge Lilley's happy smile means she's handing Business Manager Bob
Taylor another ad. Grace Miller stands by, hoping that maybe after all
they can pay for the book.
BOB TA-iXOR
Business Manager
♦ .*•♦•■% J Tl
«. % ♦ ♦<
, . uu latest brainstorm to
Jerry Kleiger explains his latest
\
Arden Anderson.
the interlachen
ROGER CAMPBELL
Cover A rlist
JACK ROMINGER
Layout Editor
kn^J
LEE BUFFO
Assistant Editor
JANET DUNN
Art Editor
HARRY ELLIOTT
Organization Editor
DORIS MAYFARTH
Class Editor
ART FALLS
Sports Editor
VIRGINIA RILEY
Feature Editor
ROSE ALLEGATO
Layout Editor
208
EDWIN HOAG
Co-Editor
^■l
CARL F. FERNER
Faculty Advisor
FORREST HALTER
Co-Editor
the southern
THE SOUTHERN is the official student publication of Florida Southern College.
Published each week by the F.C.S. journalism department, it is edited by rotating
staffs and permanent co-editors.
the staff
Co-Editor Edwin Hoag, Forrest Halter
Business Manager Ralph Rodgers
Sports Editor Chuck Keefer
Rotating Managing Editors Rose Allegato, Bob Kerr, Art
Falls, Frank Cicone, Rich McNally, Mort Tatar, Russ Fee, Joe
Sanchez, Cy Lloyd.
'XW
Editor Ed Hoag points out a few facts about headlines and deadlines during a confab
of weekly staff members, while Co-Editor Forrest Halter. Sports Editor Chuck Keefer,
and Business Manager Ralph Rodgers lend an attentive ear.
209
# # ♦ ♦
^^U^"*^:
1
210
the southern
Top: The three columnists, Jerry Kleiger South-
ern Exposure, Virginia Riley Jest Jottin's and Rose
Allegato Cabbages and Kings, plot subjects to dis-
cuss in the next issue.
Middle: Mort Tatar, Russ Fee, and Dick Beder
process copy for THE SOUTHERN.
Bottom: Rich McNally and Art Falls read over
the stories from the United Press teletype before
editing them for the Campus World News Bulletin,
which is issued daily by the journalism department.
BrLr5 q
Ob
a?N
First taste of Florida.
WEEK
How can I get out of that 8 o'clock class?
reiiieinber?
¥
Stand up and cheer, the sophs are here!
*^«*,.l
r
"^^^
Sugar for the cake race winner.
Sidewalks with a Pepsodent gleam!
Squaws raise roof of teepee !
X
Good night!
212
spo
ffs
I CD CZD [=3 CDCDCZI
213
JAMES LEASE
Varsity Baseball
J.V. Basketball
ROY COUCH
Creiv Coach
ELIZABETH ROLLER
Director of Women's
Athletics
PAUL HOLCOMBE
Varsity Basketball
Varsity Track
The rapid development of the college has only
been exceeded by the rise of the Athletic department
in Southeastern prominence under the direction of
Coach Sam Luce. With six varsity sports and a host
of intramural activities, spaced throughout the col-
lege year, the staff is complete yet diversified in
general and specialized abilities.
SAMUEL LUCE
Director of Athletics
Coach Lease points to a picture of Jim Templon, holder
2 I i of the Dixie Conference shop-put record.
Southern's coaching staff poses for a group picture
with the tennis courts as a backdrop.
CATHY GIANDELIA
KATHY MARONE
Part of the inspiration that helped our teams to victory were the nine, hard-working
cheerleaders led by Co-Captains Kathy Marone and Cathy Giandelia.
Front row, left to right: Nancy Morrow, Kathy Marone, Neva Langley, Cathy Giandelia, Pat
Gravatt.
Top row: Nancy Smith, Joan Nichols, Carol Dickson, and Lynn Clark.
217
i
Co-Captains of the Moccasins 1950-51 Basketball squad pictured
above are Bill Valentine and "Rocky" Pegg in pre-ganie practice.
Both Valentine, pictured on left, and Pegg, at right, are products
of the Indiana High School Hardwoods and were the mainstays of
the squad for the past two years.
^iTRVSK^-fOBp^^BrtElx^.t'mn^'^
^
-^.
Graduation of four of the Mocs
starting players from the 49-50
squad placed Coach Holcombe on
the spot, in this, his first year as
coach but up to the end of the
season showed constant improve-
ment and should be the team to
beat in their bid to retain their
Dixie conference championship
crown which was the 1949-50 cli-
max of a highly successful cage
season.
What's wrong with this picture?
moc basketball summary
The 1950-51 edition of Southern's basketball squad has a record of eight wins
and 12 losses, with one more game to be played against their rivals, the University
of Tampa. The record is not comparable to last year's team, since they finished with
16 wins and 11 losses including the three straight wins in gaining the Dixie Conference
Championship. In spite of their record of games won the F.S.C. cagemen have come
through the season with more spirit and determination than any previous team in
Southern's history. It was by this fighting spirit and the strength that comes through
united effort that the Mocs were able to fight to within four points of defeating a
highly subsidized team, Miami U., and upset the University of Florida, a team fav-
ored to beat Southern by at least 12 points. The team lacked experience this year,
but the major portion of this was overcome by the aggressive manner displayed by
the entire squad.
The year did uncover some bright spots, notable among them being the excellent
floor play of Gene Foutz and the scoring power of Fred Lapper. To date, the squad
is building toward the successful culmination of a mediocre season by retaining the
Dixie Conference Championship and the chances are good if they can achieve the
inspirational peak of the second Florida U. encounter.
BN^^
^ocs
tV\is
in
Vats^tV ^'Jjf one ^ss, V^
oine%^^'
Top-
pen"'
220
VOLLEYBALL— Front row, left to right:
Rodriguez, Aldrich, Hansen and Perez. Stand-
ing: Luce, Stork, Timpano, Schenkel, Top-
fer. Fox and Gutterman.
Volleyball, Southern's newest varsity sport, has
completed its second season of inter-collegiate ac-
tivity and the sport is gaining in popularity
throughout the South. The members of the team
were picked from various intramural squads that
participated in the early season play-offs. Coach
Luce has built the team into a well-knit group whose
interest in the sport has risen to the heights of
competitive spirit.
'%te«x
*^ ., ,- A.
HWM " I. ■.i,i.,iay<<
Coxswain Paul Healy puts the varsity through a hard practice on Lake Hollingsworth.
222
Coach Roy Couch and Captain Ed
Waters check the new Varsity shell
named for the captain of Southern's
first crew.
Shown on this page are last year's crew as they were preparing for the Dad Vail
regatta, which is the largest of its kind held for small schools and is comparable
to the Poughkeepsie regatta in size. The squad finished in a tie for fifth place and is
aiming for a win this year, in this, their second year, in the event.
Varsity baseball, this vear. is under the direction
of Coach Lease, with practice just getting underway
as this book went to press.
It is too early to tell what the season will hold
for the squad, but all indications point to Southern's
most successful season in many years and the pos-
sible acquisition of the Dixie conference champion-
ship.
'>m I
■ ^
ToUe connects .
. . sending Wilcox in
In addition. Lease is looking for help from
returning lettermen and seasoned veterans to bring
the Mocs their first state title by defeating such
teams as Rollins, Miami, and Florida who have
been holding forth as the powers in state inter-
collegiate baseball.
as Tolle ends up at ihird
' V^ ' ^;
Sitting: Cade, Gaylord, and Mellis.
Kneeling: Lease, Steenson, DeFonso, P. Neil, Collins, Stevens, Billstrand, Senger, Giordane,
McKenna and Wilcox.
Standing: Kreutzer, Stone, Terry, Solph, Carey, Mosco, O'Brien, Smeltzly, Decker, Watson and
Gillet.
Coach Lease instructing the squad on one of the finer
points of the game.
# # » '
The finish of the 100 yard dash.
Haskins sets for the toss.
The Flying Mocs were still in training early in
March in preparation for the coming spring sport.
The lack of proper training facilities has failed to
hamper the development of Coach Holcombe's
trackmen and they are prepared to make a good
showing for the college in dual meets and the Dixie
conference championship tourney.
A record in
the making
48 feet if it's an inch.
Practicing the start.
Front row: Beder. Brush. Geiger. Hackinaii, Ilaskins, Goodman, Jana. and Pauley.
Back row : Coach Paul Holcombe, Berg, Topfer, Huff, Kalisher, Scudero, Quince,
Raymond, and Managers Judin and Last.
Field events are stressed by Coach Holcombe as a sure way to gain points.
227
■^ ;■» > .> ^ . ♦ •• # >
INTRAMURAL WINNERS 1949-50
TENNIS Phi Sigma Kappa
VOLLEYBALL Tau Epsilon Phi
BOWLING Sigma Phi Epsilon
SOFTBALL Northern Yankees (Independent)
FOUL SHOOTING Tau Epsilon Phi
PING PONG Theta Chi
HANDBALL .. Tau Epsilon Phi
SWIMMING Tau Kappa Epsilon
TRACK Tau Epsilon Phi
FOOTBALL Tau Epsilon Phi
HORSESHOES Tau Kappa Epsilon
HIGH POINT TROPHY Tau Epsilon Phi
INTRAMURAL BOARD
Front row: Cantwell, PiKA: Orrico, LXA; Aldrich. Phi Sigma Kappa- Judin
TEP.
Standing: Luce, Clark. SAE; Stone, Board President; Stanley, Theta Chi;
and Stigelman, TKE.
The men's intramural board is the strongest student government board on
campus, formulating and ruling all sports throughout the year. The board is composed
of one representative from each recognized men's group on the campus which partici-
pates in any sport. The board has its own president and Coach Sam Luce is faculty
advisor, assisting only in matters which call for his wealth of experience in policy
and organization.
INTRAMURAL WINNERS 1950-51
CREW Tau Kappa Epsilon
VOLLEYBALL Tau Epsilon Phi
BASKETBALL Tau Epsilon Phi
The first sport of the fall season
drew many participants and spec-
tators to watch SPE down Pike in
a close match.
228
Pictured on this page are two
major winners in Southern's ex-
panded sports program for intra-
mural competition.
On the right is the Tau Kappa
Epsilon crew, coached by Varsity
coxswain Paul Healy, which won
its first crew trophy in December
by sweeping a double-elimination
tourney, wining five races without
suffering a defeat.
Tau Epsilon Phi, since its founding, has always been a major threat in all phases of
intramural sports and this year regained the basketball trophy which they lost to
Lambda Chi Alpha last year. The squad won their league title and went on to defeat
Tau Kappa Epsilon by ten points in the playoffs. Coached by Bud Stone, varsity
basketball forward, the team showed plenty of fight and ability to win one of the
most sought after titles in the sports program.
^ o (?^
^ «?>
Front row, left to right: Jerry- Riffenberg. Tony Richel,
Vic Giordano, and Bernie Topfer.
Standing, left to right: Bud Stone, Joe Gross, Dick Fagan,
Jerry Goldstein, Irwin Kalisher, and Alan Shenkel.
229
"# • # ■$■*'*
Squaring up on the target.
Five arrows, three Misses.
The women's athletic department, under the direction of Miss Elizabeth Roller, has
been concerned with the development of poise and grace in the Co-eds, rather than
too high a devotion to advancement of competitive spirit, although this phase has
not been overlooked in the final analysis of the typical college girl.
Tying run and the slugger is up next
iii\ii<i«Aik'
MISS ROLLER
i|l5<JW.9
Their nonchalance is amazing.
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SCOOTER HOCKEY CHAMPS
Alpha Chi Omega
VOLLEYBALL CHAMPS
Delta Zeta
It's easy!
•#•*♦•#•>•#
19 5 1
The crowning of Miss Southern for 1951
DR. LUDD M. SPIVEY and LORRAINE MINGONET
232
h ighl igh ts
"lorida southern college
lounders week — 1951
DATE: march fifth through the eleventh
PLACE: lakeland, f lorida
THEME: from sleam to eoal
MONDAY.
organ music
outdoor barbecue
athletic circus
TUESDAY- investiture of seniors — Albert I. Lodwick — Speaker
coronation parade
pageant: follow the gleam
queen's coronation
scholarship winners
WEDNESDAY students original musical comedy
organ music
all college and guest tea
orchestra and chorus concert
THURSDAY Bethune-Cookman Negro chorus — Dr. Daniel J. McCarthy — Speaker
chancellors' luncheon
athletic events
Faust
FRIDAY dedication of esplanade columns — Grumbacher, VonTautenhahn, Engel, G.
Floyd Zimmerman
convocation — Senator Styles Bridges (R-N.H.) — Speaker
rowing regatta — Florida Southern versus University of Tampa
citation service
all campus and alumni dance — ^Tex Beneke and orchestra
SATURDAY alumni student assembly
dedication of alumni building
outdoor barbecue
open houses
SUNDAY services at College Heights Church
chapel bells radio program
Faust
Honored during Founders Week convocation services were left to right:
Michael M. Engel, Stanley Grumbacher, Senator Styles Bridges (R.N.H),
Joseph A. ToUe, Cyril Lord, Albert L Lodwick, Bruce A. Gannaway, Gilbert,
Gen. L. J. Harris, Daniel J. McCarthy, Dr. Ludd M. Spivey, and J. William
Horsey.
233
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The Queen, her ladies-in-waiting, and court
236
Truckin' downtown
Watch the giWsfJoat by.
Cast of Faust
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Which line's for mustard?
Gerrie and Dot say 'cheese.'
238
The future takes shape.
1
Hi
FLORIDA'S
9 rOWT h
TDmhii
Congratulations
PUBLIX
SUPER MARKETS
Florida's Finest Food Stores"
CONGRATULATIONS
BLACK
and
WHITE
Cab
Phone 4441
Opposite Post Office
Compliments and
Best Wishes to all of the
Senior Class from the
1951 INTERLACHEN
AN OPEN LETTER TO YOU:
I would like to take this opportunity to whole-
heartedly thank Mr. Harold Sanborn -for
his untiring and ceaseless efforts in behalf
of the 1951 INTERLACHEN.
If it were not for his splendid cooperation,
it would not have been possible to have
this book to you — the student — at this time.
Mr. Sanborn did a magnificent job in the face
of sickness and the work that the Public
Relations office demanded of him.
Sincerely,
MORTON TATAR
Editor-in-Chief
240
Let the Dermetics *
Skin Management
Program make your
complexion the envy
of your classmates!
For Beauty Through the Years . . .
CLEANSE . . . with Dermetics S. A. Cleanser that whisks away stale make-up in seconds.
BLUSH . . . stimulate circulation with scientific Dermetics Blushing Cream.
FRESHEN . . . with non-astringent Dermetics Complexion Lotion.
PROTECT . . . with Dermetics Complexion Dress foundation.
BEAUTIFY . . . with famous Artist Portrait Make-up— vibrant color- matched
cosmetic accessories.
y/t€46
,and other famous Dermetics Products, are available in Lakeland at:
NEW FLORIDA BEAUTY SALONa» NEW FLpRIDA HOTEL
THE LILLIAN BEAUTY SALON MARBLE ARCADE
ROCHELLE'S BEAUTY SHOP 430 SOUTH FLORIDA AVENUE
EDITHS BEAUTY SALON 214'j WEST CRESAP
MYR-MAC BEAUTY SHOP 846 SOUTH NEW YORK AVENUE
RAYSOR HESTER BEAUTY SHOP 825 EAST OSCEOIA
RUTHS BEAUTY SALON 805 EAST PALMEHO
^^^/^^^^ INC.
630 Fifth Ave
New York 20
?4i
Congratulaflons
Class of '51
LAUNDER-RITE
1218 So. Florida Avenue
Bendix Automatic Self-Service
Phone 23-133
LAKE MORTON
SODA SHOP
sandwiches
soft drinks sodas
Lakeland, Florida
Compliments of
ORANGE BLOSSOM
Perfume
and
Gift Shoppe
110 S. Kentucky Ave. Lakeland, Fla.
GRAND LEADER
120 S. Kentucky Ave.
Lakeland Florida
242
Congratulations
and Best Wishes — Class of '5!
FAITH must be the foundation for Future America ! Believe in
yourself, and the lifetime ahead of you, and you will be in-
spired to unlimited success . . . Faith in your Church . . . Faith
in your Country . . . Faith inyour Leaders . . .
and Faith in Yourself.
Member FDIC
Peoples S
Bank
eopies oavings oan
Lakeland Florida
CONGRATULATIONS
to the 195! Graduating Class
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
from
FOOD MACHINERY AND CHEMICAL CORP.
Everything for fhe
Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Packers,
Canners and Concentrator
Florida Division
Lakeland, Florida
243
^*=*
Eiile.
GOCSTO
Yes, Borden's little girl Elsie goes to Southern too — treat her gently — she symbolizes
the wholesome goodness and purity you always find in your Bordens milk and ice cream.
"Borden's Dairy
CONGRATULATIONS
CLASS OF '51
FLORIDA STATE THEATRES
Finest Theatres Anywhere
Movies Are Truly Better Than Ever
244
For that
HOME OF YOUR OWN
In Tomorrow's New World • . .
BE SURE THAT YOU USE DEPENDABLE
SUNSHINE SERVICE f !. A V FOR
COOKING
■^)«dffiime
"^kl^^ HEATING
REFRIGERATION . . .
Sfieedu fiame
FLORIDA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
MILTON EDWARDS, Manager
?45
Compliments of
REECECUFF SANDWICH SHOP
Specializing in
SANDWICHES— SALADS— FRENCH FRIES— FOUNTAIN SERVICE
Phone 24882 940 So. Fla. Ave
MYRICK'S MEN'S STORE
Congratulations to Class of '51
GEO. L GAINES
V Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
JEWELER
V Palm Beach Clothes
Telephone 24191—309 East Main St.
Lakeland
V Knox Hats — Arrow Shirts
V Walkover Shoes
113 S. Kentucky Ave.— Lakeland, Fla.
Congratulations Class of 1951
LAKELAND
LINCOLN -MERCURY
201 West Main Street
Phone 4479
THESE PEOPLE
SUPPORT YOUR
YEAR BOOK. WHY
LAKELAND
LINCOLN -MERCURY
DON'T YOU
SUPPORT THEM?
Parts and Service Dep+.
Congratulations Class of 1951
201 West Main Street
Phone 4479
246
Compliments of
A. G. KING PRODUCE
COMPANY
Wholesale FruH and Produce
107 West Cannon St. Lakeland, Ha.
ALBRITTON"S SHOP
Gowns Hats
Adel Simpson Lilli Dache
Rentner Jr.
Jr. Formals Vogue
Habit Maker
Bags by Pichel Jewelry by Simpson
Lakeland, Florida
For Fine Dry Cleaning
See
FRENCH DRY CLEANERS
Pick-up
Delivery Service
Fur Coats Cleaned Zippers Replaced
112 W. Main Lakeland, Pla.
CONGRATULATIONS
to
Graduates and Faculty
Lakeland
EAT at . . . Phone 48-341
GLASS DINER
ITALIAN FOOD
Spaghetti. Ravioli, Pizza, etc.
Strollo & GiANNiNi, Proprietors
1295 East Main St. - Lakeland, Fla.
Best Wishes - - - Class of *50
. . . RACY'S . . .
LADIES' and CHILDREN'S APPAREL
PIECE GOODS
lakeland. FLORIDA
fonmen-THG HUB
In Lakeland . . . TWO QUALITY STORES
Featuring Nationally Advertised Brands
118 South Kentucky Avenue
(Famous Brands Since 1906)
• "Michaels-Stern" Suits
• "McGregor" Sportsv»ear
• "ManhaHan" Shirts
• "Interwoven" Socks
• "Jantien" Swim Wear
• "Stetson" Hats
/9* ««««««- MlUe/1,'6.
Ill - 113 E. Main Street
(Finest in Feminine Fashion)
• "Minx Modes"
• "Jo Dee"
• "Johnnye Jr."
• "Hobbles"
• "Justin McCar+y"
• "Tailored Junior"
Air Conditioned for your shopping
pleasure
247
A Cordial Welcome
from the
LAKELAND CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
to
FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE
STUDENTS
FACULTY
SAM A. BANKS, President
JOHN M. BRYSON, Manager
If You Look for the Best in
Films, Cameras, Photo Supplies
and Expert Photo Finishing
See
SANBORN CAMERA CENTER
no S. Tenn. Ave. Phone 37-242
ENGLE ELECTRIC COMPANY
. . The House of Westinghoiise
Lakeland Florida
Join Us at
GILL'S
ICE CREAM AND DELICATESSEN
World Famous Milk Shakes
by
Archie McQuagge, '42
Ed. Wilson, '41
Alumni of Florida Southern College
Phone 47-121
Sales Service
LAKELAND FORD CO.
Phone 4605 or 4606
Lakeland Florida
248
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TAYLOR PUBLISHING COM
6320 DENTON DRIVE
DALLAS, TEXAS
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